
Angel Strings
A novel by Gary Eberle
September 1, 1995 ⢠5.5 x 8.5 ⢠300 pages ⢠978-1-56689-034-2
A road-trip book for the ā90s, a westward journey through the surreal landscape of the postmodern world.
āSmall-time musician Joe Findlay, the hero of Eberleās first novel, is a caricature cynic. Son of a professional magician, he knows everything is a act: āWhen youāve been inside the trick since birth and youāve seen the cheap wires and gears, and youāve manipulated the silk threads and black velvet bags and mirrors, and youāve learned how they all work, then it spoils you for later.ā Following his fatherās career of low-rent illusion, he plays backup for Elvis impersonators in a Las Vegas casino. Yet he is driven to leave by a vague yearning for the meaning somewhere out there. On the road he meets Violet Tansy, who carries a baby in a box, needs to get to San Diego and matches his cynicism with credulous innocence. Their adventure resembles a madcap buddy movie, but the territory they explore is a dead-on satirical rendering of the American spiritual landscape: Bible believers, neo-Pagans and New Agers pick and choose among the remains of religions in search of something to believe, without any means to discern the true from the false.ā āPublishers Weekly
About the Author
Gary Eberle is the author of Angel Strings and one book of nonfiction, The Geography of Nowhere: Finding Oneās Self in the Postmodern World. He lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Reviews
Ā
āGary Eberle has written an engaging and highly entertaining first novel. Joe Findlayās dazed comic flight from illusion is a journey into self-awareness. Iām glad I signed on for the ride.ā āDan Gerber
āMagic and luck are finally words for grace, and the search for grace is what Gary Eberleās entertaining first novel is all about. Itās a book that knows how to traverse between the real and the fantastic. . . . Fresh, funny, and wise.ā āStuart Dybek
āA genuinely American ālighting outā novel of the first order. . . . A page-turner of a ride that is raucous and outrageous and relentless in its compassion for characters who, though they are heading at times both east and west, finally reach their destination by following the clearly marked spirit-map of their hearts. Angel Strings is a beauty of a book, its prose luminescent, its high degree of comic accuracy and intelligence reminiscent of Vonnegut. Cross all that with Kerouac and youāll begin to understand my addiction to their wonderfully inventive debut novel I could not put down.ā āJack Driscoll
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Description
A novel by Gary Eberle
September 1, 1995 ⢠5.5 x 8.5 ⢠300 pages ⢠978-1-56689-034-2
A road-trip book for the ā90s, a westward journey through the surreal landscape of the postmodern world.
āSmall-time musician Joe Findlay, the hero of Eberleās first novel, is a caricature cynic. Son of a professional magician, he knows everything is a act: āWhen youāve been inside the trick since birth and youāve seen the cheap wires and gears, and youāve manipulated the silk threads and black velvet bags and mirrors, and youāve learned how they all work, then it spoils you for later.ā Following his fatherās career of low-rent illusion, he plays backup for Elvis impersonators in a Las Vegas casino. Yet he is driven to leave by a vague yearning for the meaning somewhere out there. On the road he meets Violet Tansy, who carries a baby in a box, needs to get to San Diego and matches his cynicism with credulous innocence. Their adventure resembles a madcap buddy movie, but the territory they explore is a dead-on satirical rendering of the American spiritual landscape: Bible believers, neo-Pagans and New Agers pick and choose among the remains of religions in search of something to believe, without any means to discern the true from the false.ā āPublishers Weekly
About the Author
Gary Eberle is the author of Angel Strings and one book of nonfiction, The Geography of Nowhere: Finding Oneās Self in the Postmodern World. He lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Reviews
Ā
āGary Eberle has written an engaging and highly entertaining first novel. Joe Findlayās dazed comic flight from illusion is a journey into self-awareness. Iām glad I signed on for the ride.ā āDan Gerber
āMagic and luck are finally words for grace, and the search for grace is what Gary Eberleās entertaining first novel is all about. Itās a book that knows how to traverse between the real and the fantastic. . . . Fresh, funny, and wise.ā āStuart Dybek
āA genuinely American ālighting outā novel of the first order. . . . A page-turner of a ride that is raucous and outrageous and relentless in its compassion for characters who, though they are heading at times both east and west, finally reach their destination by following the clearly marked spirit-map of their hearts. Angel Strings is a beauty of a book, its prose luminescent, its high degree of comic accuracy and intelligence reminiscent of Vonnegut. Cross all that with Kerouac and youāll begin to understand my addiction to their wonderfully inventive debut novel I could not put down.ā āJack Driscoll











