Serpents in Eden
by
Book Details
About the Book
A gripping, sometimes stark, in-your-face portrayal, wed to an equally rich tapestry of sight, sound, emotions, compelling dialogue. A landscape peopled by the brave, disaffected, dispossessed, self-satisfied, dissolute and scared, but most of them in search and none escaping their fate in the midst of transformation. A bracing commentary, as well, on racial and social injustice, intolerance, religious and political, the resonance of the ‘60s, the civil-rights movement, partly told by way of an unfolding, riveting narrative in the excerpted words of a ‘7Os manuscript discovered as Adele Dubner, Manhattan literary agent, clears out her office for retirement to her Catskill getaway. And the manuscript's protagonists, a Tennessee family, whose belief in fairness and equality, has caused much grief and loss through generations.
A trip south to find her “long lost” writer and the
ending of his story, and a chance to visit her old Vassar roommate, have Adele
Dubner and Sean Hamill, hot on the trail of answers to the “who” and “why” of
his father/ writer's death nearly three decades ago.
A contemporary tale of redemption partially rendered
and realized through the insidious destruction wrought on individuals and
family by addiction--its toll and claim on soul and society, then and now. In-between these book covers, the past never
£alls away all the way. In fact, it's all the future some may possess.
About the Author
The author, an unwitting, but self-styled “doubter at large” resides in an “ex-barn by a pond” in Tennessee and ponders a “shrinking world spinning just out of reach.” A public education, then a “rich kid’s” prep school in the Rockies, a year at a Quaker college in Indiana, and a “few more places” to get a “piece of paper” that, well, “prepared me for little,” though, admittedly, he was probably was “unpreparable” much of that time. His jobs ranged from “extreme menial to extremely questionable.” He loves music, fishing, and “being near water, watching nature ...nature nature disappear. Thinking too much goes with the territory.” Writing? “If I have to.” Hope, in general? “I hope.” Answers? .'When you quit looking.” Favorite quote: “It's not so much that things are as they are, but that they are at all.” --Wittgenstein Plans? “I wanna go trout fishing again, soon, and travel some while I'm at it”