Stephen Beachy - "Some Phantom / No Time Flat" (Two Novellas)
"In Some Phantom an unnamed woman arrives in a strange city, fleeing a violent relationship in her past. Taking a job with disturbed children, her own mental stability becomes more and more precarious. A marriage of The Turn of the Screw and Herk Harvey's Carnival of Souls, Some Phantom poses questions about the line between madness and memory, fantasy and abuse, questions elaborated on in No Time Flat. No Time Flat follows Wade, a young boy who grows up on the American plains in an isolated existence with his elderly parents, as he makes his way through a childhood of playground shootings and mysterious strangers. Becoming a wanderer himself, Wade inhabits a sparse American landscape of fleeting connections, missing children, and possible crimes."
Alvin Lu - "The Hell Screens"
"Cheng-Ming, a Chinese American, rummages through the
used-book stalls and market bins of Taipei.
His object is no ordinary one - he's searching obsessively for accounts of
ghosts and spirits, suicides and murders in a city plagued by a rapist-killer
and less tangible forces. Cheng-Ming is an outsider trying to unmask both the
fugitive criminal and the otherworld of spiritual forces that are inexorably
taking control of the city. Things get complicated when the fetid island
atmosphere begins to melt his contact lenses and his worsening sight
paradoxically opens up the teeming world of ghosts and chimeras that surround
him. Vengeful and anonymous spirits commandeer Cheng-Ming's sight, so that he
cannot distinguish past from present, himself from another. Images from modern
and colonial Taiwan
- an island of restless spirits - assail Cheng-Ming even as they captivate the
reader."
Bernard M. Patten - "The Logic of Alice: Clear Thinking in Wonderland"
"In this unique approach to interpreting Alice, the fruit of ten years of research,
Dr. Bernard M. Patten shows that Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, aka Lewis Carroll,
fused his passion for logic, mathematics, and games with his love of words and
nonsense stories to produce a multifaceted, intricately structured work of
literature. Patten provides a chapter-by-chapter skeleton key to Alice, which meticulously
demonstrates how its various episodes reveal Dodgson's profound knowledge of
the rules of clear thinking, informal and formal logic, symbolic logic, and
human nature."
Peter Hook - "Unknown Pleasures: Inside Joy Division"
Unlike other books about Joy Division, Factory Records, or lead singer Ian Curtis—who took his own life just before the band's first U.S. Tour—Unknown Pleasures tells Joy Division's story from the unique perspective of one of the three surviving band members."
Albert Einstein - "Ideas and Opinions"
"A new edition of the most definitive collection of Albert
Einstein's popular writings, gathered under the supervision of Einstein
himself. The selections range from his earliest days as a theoretical physicist
to his death in 1955; from such subjects as relativity, nuclear war or peace,
and religion and science, to human rights, economics, and government."
Neil DeGrasse Tyson - "Death by Black Hole and Other Cosmic Quandaries"
"Loyal readers of the monthly "Universe" essays in Natural History magazine have long recognized Neil deGrasse Tyson's talent for guiding them through the mysteries of the cosmos with stunning clarity and almost childlike enthusiasm. Here, Tyson compiles his favorite essays across a myriad of cosmic topics. The title essay introduces readers to the physics of black holes by explaining the gory details of what would happen to your body if you fell into one. "Holy Wars" examines the needless friction between science and religion in the context of historical conflicts. "The Search for Life in the Universe" explores astral life from the frontiers of astrobiology. And "Hollywood Nights" assails the movie industry's feeble efforts to get its night skies right."
Joshua Mohr - "Fight Song"
"When his bicycle is intentionally run off the road by a
neighbor's SUV, something snaps in Bob Coffin. Modern suburban life has been
getting him down and this is the last straw. To avoid following in his own
father’s missteps, Bob is suddenly desperate to reconnect with his wife and his
distant, distracted children. And he's looking for any guidance he can get.
Bob Coffin soon learns that the wisest words come from the most unexpected places, from characters that are always more than what they appear to be: a magician/marriage counselor, a fast-food drive-thru attendant/phone-sex operator, and a janitor/guitarist of a French KISS cover band. Can these disparate voices inspire Bob to fight for his family? To fight for his place in the world?
A call-to-arms for those who have ever felt beaten down by life, Fight Song is a quest for happiness in a world in which we are increasingly losing control. It is the exciting new novel by one of the most surprising and original writers of his generation."
Bob Coffin soon learns that the wisest words come from the most unexpected places, from characters that are always more than what they appear to be: a magician/marriage counselor, a fast-food drive-thru attendant/phone-sex operator, and a janitor/guitarist of a French KISS cover band. Can these disparate voices inspire Bob to fight for his family? To fight for his place in the world?
A call-to-arms for those who have ever felt beaten down by life, Fight Song is a quest for happiness in a world in which we are increasingly losing control. It is the exciting new novel by one of the most surprising and original writers of his generation."
Norman Lock - "A History of the Imagination"
"A History of the Imagination is a postmodern tale of adventure that reshapes the parameters of time and space, thought and action. In a metaphorical Africa, replete with nostalgia (but no dimensions), anything can happen and usually does. The narrator defends his magical departures, saying his is a history of possibilities, where fiction is "no less real for [it's] being so." But when Darwin's corpse begins to lust after Colette and the African porters go on strike because the author hasn't acknowledged the important role they play, we are left to wonder: just how far is reality from dreams?
Norman Lock juxtaposes remote times and places, historical facts and literary fictions, to create an absurdist collage reminiscent of Guy Davenport and Donald Barthelme. In this world it is not impossible to sail from Mombasa to Cinncinati, or to set out from the City of Radiant Objects, where "things are free of the obligation to signify," or to go hunting icebergs in a quest to avenge the Titanic at last. Borne aloft by Wilbur Wright, Jules Verne, Ziegfield, and Houdini, we find ourselves lost again in a "seam in the world...between History and Imagination."
(27,570)