2012 Puddly Awards
 
 
Follow us on TwitterFollow us on FacebookFollow us on Google+Follow us on TumblrSubscribe to RSS


Recently Viewed clear list


Guests | May 22, 2012

James Bernard Frost: IMG I'm a Writer... Now What Do I Do with My Life?



For everyone I know who is a writer, there was some awkward time in their lives when they had to learn to call themselves one. You'd make a few... Continue »
  1. $13.97 Sale Trade Paper add to wish list

    A Very Minor Prophet

    James Bernard Frost 9780983304982

spacer
Ships free on qualified orders.
$13.50
New Trade Paper
Ships in 1 to 3 days
Add to Wishlist
Available for In-store Pickup
in 7 to 12 days
Qty Store Section
1 Remote Warehouse Literature- A to Z

The Size of the Universe

by Joseph Cardinale

The Size of the Universe Cover

ISBN13: 9781573661584
ISBN10: 1573661589
All Product Details

Only 1 left in stock at $13.50!

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher 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 Author

Joseph 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 Saying

Add a comment for a chance to win!
Average customer rating based on 1 comment:

Grady Harp, October 25, 2010 (view all comments by Grady Harp)
A Book of Wonders

Joseph Cardinale enters the world of written fiction not through a door of expectation but as a seer who drops out of the heavens with a completely fresh and unique and mesmerizingly broad spectrum of stories in this his first book, THE SIZE OF THE UNIVERSE. Attempting to imagine where the ideas for these odd and fascinating tales originated is far less important than simply jumping into any one of the six short stories this book contains. Cardinale finds terra firme wherever he sets his matrix for opening a thought progression that feels more important than a linear story line. He seems to be recalling the wild imagination of the quest for meaning of the universe as seen and evolved in the eyes of a child (some of these stories are clearly the related from the vantage of very young minds with ancient souls). And that is not to say these pages are ramblings of a mind exploring the vastness of the Universe: these are terse, beautifully sculpted stories with highly defined characters who happen to be in situations that open the windows for thinking about greater issues.

In 'The Singularity' a boy and his sister play hid and seek in the evening, a game that results in a fall from the boy's hiding place in a maple tree, a fall that frees the boy's soul to ascend into the heavens viewing the strange proceedings on the earth below: a stopwatch and a beam of light from the sister's flashlight contribute as much to the veneer of the story as the human characters. In 'The Great Disappointment' a mother and son are left in the upper portions and roof of their house after a flood has covered all else. Maps and quadrants and graphs are created to make some sense of their destiny until the two sense the presence of a moving creature in the water, a creature they call the Savior, who is caught by the mother's fishing line and resembles an orangutan. The conflict of keeping the Savior on the roof with the two finally results in the mother casting him back into the flood waters. The son ponders the Godlike qualities of the creature. The mother argues 'God wants us to feel disappointed in this world. He wants us to think we belong somewhere else.' The son replies 'I don't see a difference....between.. What God wants...What kind of world we think we're owed. This world and that world - I don't see how it matters unless there's a line between them.' To imagine a conversation such as this between the two remaining people on the earth after a huge flood helps us appreciate the depth of philosophy and skill of communication that lies in the hands and mind of Joseph Cardinale.

In 'Art in Heaven' Cardinale creates a conversation between a father and son about a number of odd sightings - a captured moth in a bottle, an escaped buffalo, a thirsty peace lily, a cave, the concept of running away from home- all transformed into a complex exploration of biblical events and the concept of God. 'You're still and atheist,' said Father./ 'I think so.' /'But you believe in life.' /'I have experiential evidence of life.' / 'But God is life,' he said.'/ 'Okay. Then I believe in God.' And the Father shares his concept of the Christ as just a man who took advantage of the expectations of the Messiah's coming and made himself Christ - a conversation so intricately fascinating that this story alone could be the driver for owning this book. Until of course another story appears upon turning the page that discusses a man whose wife has vanished and he finds solace in an Astronomy course. And in the paths of thought this examination of the universe opens the author places the words 'The point is simply that the line between what you are and what you're observing is erasable--that if you stare at an object all the way and without limitation you are no longer anything else. You're everything.'

Strange stories flickering with humor, with profound questions about questioning who we are and how we fit into the overall ether of the Universe, and tales that marry tenderness with religious flavoring and an audible plea for understanding the line between being and nothingness. Few authors can explore the interstices of the hungry mind with the palpable convictions of characters who could possibly be all around us the way that Joseph Cardinale so successfully does. He is a major talent given the evidence of this, his first book, and he is most assuredly a writer to watch.

Grady Harp
Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No
(4 of 4 readers found this comment helpful)

Product Details

ISBN:
9781573661584
Author:
Cardinale, Joseph
Publisher:
F2c
Subject:
General
Subject:
General Fiction
Subject:
Literature-A to Z
Edition Description:
1
Publication Date:
20101031
Binding:
TRADE PAPER
Language:
English
Pages:
136
Dimensions:
8.5 x 5.5 in

Related Subjects

Fiction and Poetry » Literature » A to Z
Languages » Foreign Languages » Spanish » Fiction and Poetry » Literature » A to Z

The Size of the Universe New Trade Paper
0 stars - 0 reviews
$13.50 In Stock
Product details 136 pages F2c - English 9781573661584 Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review" by , "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" by ,

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.

spacer
spacer
  • back to top
Follow us on...



Powell's City of Books is an independent bookstore in Portland, Oregon, that fills a whole city block with more than a million new, used, and out of print books. Shop those shelves — plus literally millions more books, DVDs, and eBooks — here at Powells.com.