| |
|
|
|
5 Reviews
|
| 5 stars: |
 |
(5) |
| 4 stars: |
 |
(0) |
| 3 stars: |
 |
(0) |
| 2 stars: |
 |
(0) |
| 1 star: |
 |
(0) |
|
| |
|
|
|
ShareThis
|
|
|
|
|
| Synopsis |
|
In Steven Galloway's Ascension the story of Salvo Usari, a Romany tightrope walker, begins where it ends: almost 1,400 feet about the streets of New York City in a fictional 1976 performance on a wire suspended between the World Trade Center towers. From this first moment, Galloway establishes a careful balance between a thrilling adventure story enriched by circus lore and ca haracter-driven tale reflecting Salvo's complex life and remarkable immigrant history. Leaving New York, Galloway shifts to Savlo's youth in Transylvania, circa 1919. Salvo's father, Miksa, has taught his nine-year-old son the essential myths that form the Rom, or gypsy, identity, but the legends cannot prepare the boy for an abrupt tragedy, an accident at a gadje church, that leads to the murder of his father and mother and to Salvo's long separation from his brother and baby sister. Salvo climbs to the pinnacle of the mammoth church steeple, tears out his soul--flinging it towards God--and begins a wandering life. Galloway then traces the paths of the Usari siblings over the years until they are rejoined at work as a family of tightrope walkers, eventually achieving acclaim in the Fisher-Fielding circus in the United States. But even reunited the Usaris cannot escape tragedy and further death. In the end, Salvo must return to the wire alone to pacify his unquiet mind. Galloway's execution of story and character is nearly flawless throughout, and his narrative, like Michael Chabon's The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, captures the essence of the 20th-century immigrant odyssey. But it is the blending of Romany folk tales and well-researched circus craft with this otherwise powerful narrative that defines Ascension and makes its unique contribution to literary art. --Patrick O'Kelley |
|
| * |
Note - the synopsis may refer to a different edition. Please click on the Product Details tab below for specific information about this book. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Get Better Prices & Faster Shipping
|
 |
 |
 |
| |
Faster Shipping Get the book faster by selecting the nearest location
Better Prices Save an extra 50 cents on every additional book ordered from the same location
Savings Icon Once you add a book to your cart, we’ll make it easy to find additional books from the same location by placing our savings icon next to the book price
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
| SELLER |
SHIPS FROM |
CONDITION |
COPIES |
PRICE |
SHIPPING |
ORDER |
|
|
Thrift Books
|
Seattle, WA |
Good  |
1 |
|
FREE |
|
|
|
 |
Ex-Library Book |
 |
 |
 |
| |
| Proceeds from this sale go to our Library Partners |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12/18/2003 By : Richard Wells
|
 |
Steven Galloway has written a remarkable book. "Ascension," is the story of Salvo Usari, the family he leaves behind, and the family he gathers around him. It's also an account of the persecuted Rom, or gypsy culture, the metaphors and techniques of tight-rope walking, and the lives of "circus people." The story starts with a hair-raising account of a tight-rope walk between the twin towers of the World Trade Center, and as I wondered where the author could possibly go from chapter one, I found myself traveling the world with the extended Usari family from one adventure to another. Mr. Galloway seasons the telling with stories within the story, and it matters not whether they sprang full blown from his imagination, or are, in fact, the secret tales of the Rom. They are marvelous inventions that root the family in an ancient culture, and help explain the vicissitudes of their time on earth. Other than its obvious details, "Ascension," is an aptly titled meditation on rising to the heights of your abilities, and maintaining your balance once the height is achieved. All the characters, none more than Salvo Usari, climb above their circumstances, but one solid rule of physics wins out - what goes up, must come down. "Ascension," is a book for everyone. It belongs on any adult, young/mature, or family reading list, and I hope, like the Usari family, it finds the audience it deserves. Highly recommended.
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
|
09/19/2003 By : Kate McKinley
|
 |
|
I simply couldn't put this book down. Salvo Ursari is a rom wire walker who performs in the circus. The novel opens with him walking between the towers of the world trade center, and this one scene is so heart stopping, so well written that I was actually sweating. I bought the book for my daughter and she loved it too.
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
|
09/14/2003 By : Lisa Copel
|
 |
|
This is one of the most gripping books I've ever read. The first chapter is breathtaking. I read a lot of books, and this is the best one I've read this year, one of the best I've ever read. An unknown author whose work I highly recommend.
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
|
04/10/2003
|
 |
I love this book. I recently heard Mr. Galloway on the CBC talking about his writing and reading from this book. I usually don't buy hardcover books, but I was in the bookstore browsing for my nephew's birthday and I thought I should check out Ascension. The cover is beautiful, but the inside is even better! I started reading the first chapter, part of which I had heard on the radio earlier. He hooked me. I bought the book for my nephew and thought I could read it before I send it back east. Well, I read it, but couldn't give it up. I bought another copy to send! What makes it so good? The characters--Salvo, oh how I love Salvo. He breaks my heart. The stories. What happens. One of the things I love about this, is that you can see everything so vividly, but he never uses really poet language. The story is told simply and beautifully. I was haunted by the people in this book. Ascension is a very special story, full of special people. I HIGHLY recommend you purchase this book. You will fall in love.
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
|
02/10/2004
|
 |
ASCENSION, by Steven Galloway There are few people who will not feel the fearful tension of observing another person conquering the high wire. It is a sense that normally can only be endured for relatively short spans of time. In this story Steven Galloway has his characters, led by the high wire artist Salvo Ursari, carefully and persistently walk that wire through a lifetime beginning in the 1920's of central Europe and ending across the Atlantic in America ending in 1975. It is a lifetime of unrelenting suspense. Like the wire itself, the technique of maintaining constantly recurring emotions of success bordering on disaster throughout a book is a path that is very fine and perilous. If an author is not careful the intense apprehension of so many situations may overcome the reader and all is lost, just as with the wire artist who pushes himself too far and falls. Shakespeare recognized that an audience can endure only so much before comic relief is required to preserve the life of a story. There is precious little comic relief to be found in this book. Somehow Mr. Galloway just manages to stay barely within the allowed limits that keep his story from floating quickly downward into the abyss of ludicrous nothingness. This is a book in which anxiety is so pervasive as to nearly bring the story over the line of reality. A large part of the thrill of this book is that the author manages, like his high wire artist character, to stay just inside the bounds that avoid disaster. It is not an easy discipline. As Salvo Ursari carefully steps through life, starting as an Hungarian gypsy and ending as something of an American circus super star, he and his family embroil the reader into most, if not every strength, weakness, and emotion known to mankind. The loyalty and prejudices of the group; love and hatred; jealousy and attachment; carelessness and curiosity; pride and humility; bravery and cowardice; fear and courage; simple family life and corporate politics; strength and frailty; pain and joy; and of course life and death are all found in the lives of his characters. This is a story. A story of life, a story of stories. Truth is revealed, sometimes sharply and sometimes vaguely. As specific events unfold one always knows what is coming yet the story remains an intriguing mystery. A person might ask upon finishing the story "What was that all about?' at the same time there is likely to be a sense of gratitude for having read it and for the author having written it. Very entertaining.
|
| |
|
| |
| |
|
|
|
There are currently no other bindings for this particular item.
|
|
|
Additional information for this item found below:
|
| |
- Binding : Hardcover
- Length : 288 Pages
- Publisher : Carroll & Graf
- Release Date : August, 2003
- ISBN-10 : 0786712082
- ISBN-13 : 9780786712083
- Dimensions : 8.62 X 5.78 X 1.06 inches
- Shipping Weight : 1.05 pounds
|
|
|
| |
 |
You might also enjoy |
 |
| |
|
|
| The Final Confession of Mabel Stark |
| Robert Hough |
| $3.95 |
|
 |
|
|
|
|
| Vengeance Is Mine |
| William W. ... |
| $4.12 |
|
 |
|
|
|
|
| Indigo Slam: An Elvis Cole Novel... |
| Robert Crais |
| $4.06 |
|
 |
|
|
|
|
| The Education of Little Tree |
| Forrest Carter |
| $3.95 |
|
 |
|
|
|
|
| Sointula |
| Bill Gaston |
| $3.97 |
|
 |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
|
|
| |
|