For the readers of Jim Harrison and Ron Hansen, an entrancing first novel of doomed love in the badlands of Nevada and Utah by a Stegner Award-winning writer.
I gave this book to my mother, and she was reading it in her car while stopped at red lights. The book's philosophical and racy passages are equally engaging; the descriptions of the landscape open spaces in your mind.
Great novel - I can't wait to read Carnival Wolves
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
The language is fast but takes on an emptiness that reflects the Nevada desert. The story is an interesting one with sudden twists (making crop circles, drag racing on the salt flats)and takes on a slightly religious tone towards the end, but not overly so that the author becomes self-indulgent. Funny, interesting, great characters, vivid descriptions. I highly recommend it.
A remarkable, lyrical book full of insight.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
This remarkable book betrays a genius for language in a variety of places. Poetic and fast paced, it is as if keats had sat down to write king.
loved the book. boldy imagined and written. breaks the rules
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
I couldn't disagree more with the Kirkus review. This book breaks many conventions of fiction writing and sparkles because of it. From the moment those snakes are shocked out of their holes, this novel barrels forward with the breathless passion of its narrator, the old blackjack dealer. Anyone who knows writing knows from the richness and power in his voice that his love for Charlotte, though unexpected and selfish--as love often is--is real. I read the book in two rapt sittings. When the old man's mind's eye follows Charlotte and Keith through Las Vegas and the Nevada desert, I AM there with them, happily, sometimes eerily and in luscious discomfort. The novel's ending was entirly unsuspected and at once inevitable, which is perhaps a novel's highest praise; it takes an artist. But it's the passion and complexity of the old man's consciousness that makes this book the work of art it is, a book I would love to say that I had written. Rock is the man.
Do Utah and Nevada really need each other?
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
The depravity of Nevada with its casinos and showgirls is set against the morality (???) and starkness of Mormon-dominated Utah. As a recent transplant to Utah, I relished the explanations of LDS rituals that were described with not so subtle criticism--for me that rush of knowing what you're not supposed to know. But, the narrator, an old man who thinks he knows everything--and ultimately ruins everything--is a little over the top and more than a little self-indulgent
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