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Spaceman Blues: A Love Song

by Brian Slattery

Spaceman Blues: A Love Song Cover

ISBN13: 9780765316141
ISBN10: 0765316145
Condition: Standard
All Product Details

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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

When Manuel Rodrigo de Guzmán González disappears, Wendell Apogee decides to find out where he has gone and why. But in order to figure out what happened to Manuel, Wendell must contend with parties, cockfights, and chases; an underground city whose people live in houses suspended from cavern ceilings; urban weirdos and alien assassins; immigrants, the black market, flight, riots, and religious cults.

 

Painted in browns and grays and sparked by sudden fires, Spaceman Blues is a literary retro-pulp science-fiction-mystery-superhero novel, the debut of a true voice of the future, and a cult classic in the making.

Review:

"'Editor/writer/musician Slattery's chaotic debut takes readers on a headlong trip to the end of the world. Manuel Gonzlez, a legendary New York City party animal, has disappeared and his apartment has exploded, leaving behind only the memories of his thousands of friends and enemies. His lover, Wendell Apogee, is determined to find out what happened. So are police inspectors Herman Trout and Lenny Salmon, who uncover a web of bizarre characters, from Lucas Henderson, former Lunar Temple cult member, and Arturo 'El Flaco' Domnguez,' Gonzlez's worst enemy, to a washed-up '80s pop band the Marsupials. As Wendell tracks Gonzlez through Darktown, 'the place where you find lost things,' the prophecies of the apocalyptic Church of Panic begin coming true: aliens threaten to invade Earth, and Wendell must become superhero Captain Spaceman and save the planet. The story itself doesn't make much sense, but Slattery has a grand time showing off the colorful underground culture of cockfights, raves and endless intoxication that keeps things moving in his hallucinatory vision of New York.' Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Review:

Praise for Spaceman Blues: A Love Song

Spaceman Blues is a mad ride related by a pulp sensibility filtered through the nonstop freneticism of New Yorks subcultures, real and imagined.” Booklist

“For Fans Of: the surreal odyssey of Ralph Ellisons Invisible Man; Plan 9 from Outer Space.… For all its colorful characters and gonzo thrills, Slatterys debut is first and foremost a moving portrait of Wendell's griefs. A-” Entertainment Weekly

“Slatterys debut is a kaleidoscopic celebration of the immigrant experience.… Pynchon crossed with Steinbeck, painted by Dalí: impossible to summarize, swinging from the surreal to the hyper-real, a brilliantly handled, tumultuous yarn.” Kirkus Reviews

“The book is a marvel: funny, weird, touching, a joy to read not just for its music and its imagination, but for the generous and intelligent view of life that it offers: a view of life that is neither sentimental nor cynical, full of a certain type of hope but never blind to the miseries hope can cause. Spaceman Blues is a cousin and equal of some recent novels that have maintained my faith in the ability of fiction to simultaneously possess meaning, beauty, and vision, but its a singular book, offering its own riffs on the joys and pains of life and its own rifts across the surface of our shared delusions and commingled dreams.” Matthew Cheney, Las Vegas Weekly and The Mumpsimus

“I could think of two other Toms who came to mind while reading the book: Tom Wolfe and Tom Robbins.” Leonard Lopate (regarding prior comparisons to Thomas Pynchon)

“Slatterys chaotic debut takes readers on a headlong trip to the end of the world.… Slattery has a grand time showing off the colorful underground culture of cockfights, raves and endless intoxication that keeps things moving in his hallucinatory vision of New York.” Publishers Weekly

“The book jacket describes Spaceman Blues as a ‘literary retro-pulp science-fiction-mystery-superhero novel, and it not only lives up to the hype, but may include a genre or two more besides.… The book weaves a mixture of gritty war elements with hardboiled Hammett-like detective mystery, poetic romance reminiscent of Isabel Allende, and science fiction that brings Stanislaw Lem to mindinto something that seems fresh and compelling.” School Library Journal

Spaceman Blues is a welcome Band-Aid for those still mourning the loss of Kurt Vonnegut and his uniquely wacky, satirical brand of sci-fi. Theres also a touch of Paul Austers flair for genre blending and New York mythologizing.... A strange and whimsical mash note to the city, Slatterys apocalyptome proves that this newcomer is as thoughtful and irreverent as doomsayers come. [Four stars.]” Time Out New York

“Early reviews of Spaceman Blues threw around the names of Pynchon, Doctorow, and Dick as stylistic touchstones. But Slattery should really be considered alongside NYC homeboys like Lethem and Shteyngart, the former for his loving tweaks of vintage pulp, the latter for his sharp immigrant comedy.… Hes written a breezy, funny, formally playful book that, as apocalyptic novels go, is a helluva cheerier beach read than Cormac McCarthys The Road, and so visual it cries out for a film treatment.” Will Hermes, The Village Voice 

“A few here might remember me mentioning a promise to review what I thought was one of the most original novels of the year. Well, here it is.… The end of the world was never so fun.” Aint It Cool News

“What a breathless, mad tornado of words! When it shakes itself awake the earth trembles and the helpless reader is dragged gladly into its light. I havent had this much fun with a book in years.” Harlan Ellison® 

“With prose that effortlessly glides from one surrealist scene to another, Brian Slattery proves to be not only a visionary of the absurd, but also a genuinely talented postmodern voice.” Michael Hearst of the band One Ring Zero (As Smart As We Are

“It happens only very rarelyyou read a book by a new author, and all you can say is ‘wow. That was the case with Spaceman Blues: ‘Wow. To say anything more would mean the inevitable descent into cheap clichés‘hooked by the first paragraph, ‘dizzying, ‘a visionary roller-coaster ride, ‘reminiscent, if anything, of Thomas Pynchon in its scope, its explosive imagination, the swirling, jazzy flow of the prose. So much can and should be said about Mr. Slattery's debutbut I think Ill just stick with a simple ‘wowor if you prefer a visual summation, try an exclamation point on fire.” Jim Knipfel, author of Slackjaw 

 “Brian Slatterys Spaceman Blues is brilliant. Its got the edgy paranoia and secret reality plotting of the best of Phil Dick, wrapped inside a contemporary stylistic sensibility that stands proudly against Miéville or Doctorow, with a heavy leavening of Nueva York emigre culture to give the work a distinctly American voicethe brawling, postmillennial, multicultural America of twenty-first century New York. This is the transmogrification of Phillip Roths New York by way of The Matrix and a double handful of wild-ass street drugs into something all too recognizable.” Jay Lake, author of Mainspring 

“An extraordinary story that hovers between, beneath, above, but never in a familiar territory. But it hovers on thin marginsso much is recognizable, and yet… The thick reality of the informal economy as science fiction is one image that comes to mind. The specificity of this unsettlement becomes a way of seeing what you can otherwise not see.” Saskia Sassen, author of  Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages 

Spaceman Blues is a strange new creature: apocalyptic SF with the stylistic pyrotechnics of a beat poet on speed. There is nothing else out there like it, a vaulting, twisted song of decadent and desperate parties, grief and superheroes, sex and memory, and almost incidentally, the end of the world. This book leaves a glowing handprint on the mind which will not soon fade.” Catherynne M. Valente, author of The Orphans Tales: In the Night Garden 

Spaceman Blues is a brave, kinetic novela heady, original mixture of the surreal and the postmodern. It never stops moving and it never lets up. A spectacular new voice.” Jeff VanderMeer, World Fantasy Award-winning author of City of Saints and Madmen

Synopsis:

Painted in browns and grays and sparked by sudden fires, Spaceman Blues is a literary retro-pulp-SF-mystery-superhero novel, the debut of a true voice of the future, and a cult classic in the making.

About the Author

Brian Francis Slattery is an editor, writer, and occasional musician living in New Haven, Connecticut. This is his first novel.

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating based on 1 comment:
jarygel, September 25, 2007 (view all comments by jarygel)
Brilliantly insane. Spaceman Blues braids the various meanings of Alien, and plays on the hopes and fears of everyone who loves the history of immigration in this country and fears what the future may hold for those who have not yet come. Under the Sci-Fi exterior is a social and political commentary, a love story (as the title says), a tragic hero and a view of New York that will change the way you see the city forever. This book made me laugh, cry and think - I can give it no greater praise than that.
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Product Details

ISBN:
9780765316141
Subtitle:
A Love Song
Author:
Slattery, Brian
Author:
Slattery, Brian Francis
Publisher:
Tor Books
Subject:
Science Fiction - General
Subject:
Science / General
Subject:
Science fiction
Edition Description:
Trade Paper
Publication Date:
August 2007
Binding:
Paperback
Grade Level:
General/trade
Language:
English
Pages:
219
Dimensions:
8.18x5.58x.61 in. .45 lbs.

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