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The Size of the Universeby Joseph Cardinale
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:The landscape of this novel in stories—Joseph Cardinales first book-length work of fiction—is as familiar as childhood yet beguilingly surreal. The question of whether or not the child in the first fiction and the man in the last story are the same person—and whether any person is the same from one moment to the next—is perhaps the books main question.
In prose as spare as it is meticulous, The Size of the Universe conjures an elegant labyrinth of time, space, and memory, in which a wavering self, a self on the verge of becoming nothing, seeks a safe haven from the throes of near-religious ecstasy. It is a debut work that is inviting, perplexing, and bold. Review:"Cardinale begins his beguiling debut story collection with a quote from the book of Genesis that ends, as Adam and Eve hide in the garden, with the Lord asking, 'Where are you?' This question, and others — of faith, belief, existence, meaning — plague the players of Cardinale's stories. In 'The Great Disappointment,' the longest and most affecting, a son and mother are isolated in their hilltop home after a great flood. They fish from the roof and have visions of the second coming. The mother eventually hooks 'the Savoir,' a blind beast 'like an underwater ape...coated in thick reddish hair,' and keeps him in the house until the son can't take it any longer. 'The Singularity' finds a brother and 'Sister' playing an increasingly dangerous game of hide and seek that takes a turn both terrible and wonderful when 'Father' comes home. And in 'Art in Heaven,' a father and son argue about Jesus, time, the ark, God's plan, and other illusory concepts. Cardinale's prose is often as hypnotic as his imagination: 'As the smoke rose from the bowl of the pipe and vanished into the past...' Cardinale creates a troubling and wondrous world, scattered with of lost souls desperately trying to remake our oldest myths. (Dec.)" Publishers Weekly Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved. Synopsis:The author's first book-length work of fiction that is as familiar as childhook yet beguilingly surreal. This book conjures an elegant labyrinth of time, space, and memory, in which a wavering self, a self on the verge of becoming nothing, seeks a safe haven from the throes of near-religious ecstasy. About the AuthorJoseph Cardinale grew up in Jamesport, New York. A graduate of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst MFA program, he lives in Honolulu. His fiction has appeared in New York Tyrant and Denver Quarterly. What Our Readers Are SayingAdd a comment for a chance to win!Average customer rating based on 1 comment:![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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Fiction and Poetry » Literature » A to Z
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