The Fox with the White Scarf

by Joseph A. Psarto


Formats

Softcover
$15.95
$13.95
E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$13.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 10/3/2007

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 280
ISBN : 9781434332196
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 1
ISBN : 9781467826853

About the Book

There is an Asian faerie tale about a magical fox who wears a white scarf and talks to the humans, but only to those who are without guile. In our story, the myth of the fox with the white scarf is mixed with two wars and two romances almost four hundred years apart, but connected by blood and circumstance, love and honor, and a jumble of languages, nations and cultures.

The background is Japan and Korea, the dilemmas are universal.


About the Author

Joe Psarto was born in 1931, in Coatesville, Pennsylvania. After college and his army service Joe lived in Korea with his wife Sunae and his daughter Nancy for twenty-one years, plus another year in Hong Kong. He has traveled extensively all over the world, especially Asia, and now is living in Westlake, Ohio. Joe began writing in 1995. By then his adventures were piled high, a very good asset for a writer of fiction.

"Zohar and the Fox-girl," Joe's debut novel, was published in May, 2006, and it has been met with critical acclaim.

For most of his life Joe has read over fifty books a year, mostly novels, but also biography, history and poetry. He considers fiction to be capable of greater truth than nonfiction. For instance, what gives a closer picture of the evils brought on by the industrial revolution in England, a history book or the novels of Charles Dickens?

Joe considers the novel to be the greatest art form of all because of its ability to extend beyond time and space, for time and space may be exploited as the author sees fit. A split second may take five pages and a century but a sentence. Metaphor and allegory may be used to describe a character, a place or a situation as fully as the author wishes. On the other hand, a painting freezes but a moment in time, and that, too, is great art, but it cannot be as expansive as literary fiction, nor as capable of presenting the many faces of reality.

Literary fiction gives a reader the ability to reimagine the story being told and to enter into it seeking a solution for a personal dilemma. (The reply might be that there is no solution.) And a book can be picked up or put down at any time, its story paused, the universe suspended, and then brought back to existence.