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Hardcover The Sky Below Book

ISBN: 0618439250

ISBN13: 9780618439256

The Sky Below

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Like New

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Book Overview

From a rising literary star "in the tradition of Carol Shields and A. S. Byatt" comes this luminous story of a contemporary man's metamorphosis. Andrea Barrett and Michael Cunningham have lauded... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

A Journey That Is a Literary Masterpiece

Do not ignore the opening sentence: "When did I first stumble into the wrong grove?" Unlike the two-star reviewer's assessment of this novel, the opening chapter, "The House," sets the tone and provides the symbolism for the rest of this very unusual novel. It is what the reader needs for the rest of the novel which is, in my opinion, brilliant writing. This is essentially a story about a boy's and then the man's need to find his father, one of those universal themes in literature. So, reader, be very much aware of the ingredients you are provided in this opening chapter where young Gabe is living in Massachusetts with his mother and sister, where the three of them create a fantasy world and where the distant father decides to abandom them, leaving behind his collection of guitars and other items, not the least of which is his radio with its dial stuck in one place. Gabe carries that radio with him, first to Florida when his mother is forced to leave the house he adores. This is a magical book. And I am not that fond of books that venture into the fantasy world. But this novel works so well that the reader just floats along, starting with the swamp in Florida and ending with a great adventure in Mexico. Gabe is our narrator. And while living in Florida, he begins his life of what at first are small crimes. And then will come the bigger ones. Then as an adult he becomes a journalist of sorts, writing obituaries for a truly awful New York City newspaper. And that is where he meets a wonderful character, the author of a series of trashy novels that have been so popular, consuming forests for the paper to print them, that she has been able to purchase many wonderful houses. And then something happens which requires the skills--if writing trashy novels necessitates skills--Gabe has. But we know, of course, he does because he is our narrator. Gabe is gay, or sort of homosexual. I'll not tell you more. You'll find out. It's a wonderful book and the first I have read by Stacey d'Erasmo.

Lyrical.

I don't love magical realism, but the writing in this book was so beautiful that I more than forgave the author. This is the kind of book where you will want to stop and re-read sentences and paragraphs again, because it is so well written.

"A penitent, a messenger, scurrying from temple to temple, tie flapping"

A selfish and manipulate cad is the narrator of The Sky Below, a drama that centers on the spiritual and emotional development of Gabriel Collins, a sexually ambiguous young man who spends much of his life haunted by the sudden disappearance of his father from their home in Bishop, Massachusetts. An artist, Gabriel's early life is shadowed by his mother's tales of mythological gods, especially that of Tereus, a half-bird, half-warrior and her bottles of food coloring and their symphony of blue and red in the kitchen sink. With no money and mired in debt, the family leave for Florida where Gabriel and his older sister Caroline help their mother run The Sunburst, a rundown motel, in front of a two-lane highway. While mother takes charge of the motel with a vengeance, preoccupied with just trying to scrape out a living, Gabriel soon learns the monetary value of sex, pleasuring strange men at bust station bathrooms and sell drugs with his best school friend, the overweight Jenny with her cherry-red windbreaker. But for Gabriel life at the Sunburst feels like purgatory, "a hot scrubby drive to nowhere" and he aches for his life back in Bishop, where his masterpiece, The City was made from opened Christmas boxes, and torn wrapping paper and murals. A type of mythical beast that gradually grows and metamorphoses, Gabriel's life gradually becomes a series of allegorical boxes. Even as he remains caught in his Dad's enormous, spectral grip, his transistor radio the only remnants that his dad ever existed, the scrappy dollar notes and the stolen trinkets kept in shoe boxes under the bed, eventually jumpstart Gabriel's new life in Manhattan. Living in an apartment in 7th street and working near to the Stock Exchange, and the shadowy blocks in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, Gabriel meets the aging author Fluer, and helps her write her Stolen Girls series of books, while his freezer steadily fills with nice, cold, foil-wrapped bricks of money, courtesy of his new and wealthy benefactor. A natural schemer, Gabriel is confronted with enormous challenges, especially the affordability of a house on Pineapple street that he'd always wanted and was sure he was going to get. It's also not surprising then that the inevitable occurs making him question his relationship with his wealthy lover Janos and the strangely inappropriate intimate friendship with his best friend Sarah who leaves him for a puppeteer. Heavily symbolic, this novel is about one man's spiritual journey as he tries to find a place for himself in the world. Gabriel's trajectory through New York and then onto Ixtlan, Mexico is loaded with surprises. Discontented, disconnected, and even vengeful, Gabe is not a very likeable character. And it is his internal battles that emotionally drain the reader even as a rare form of cancer, like a lion roars through him, his life becoming like a series of fractuals, each fragmenting into kaleidoscopic parts, some vivid, some murky, some jagged, and all
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