Ghosted
Autor Shaughnessy Bishop-Stallen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 sep 2010
Then Mason has a bright idea. He'll find the cash to pay Chaz back by becoming a ghostwriter of suicide notes, a fitting use of his talents. The trouble is that Mason is hard-wired to rescue people, and no one needs rescuing more than the suicidal. Except maybe the woman he is falling in love with -- Willy, a wheelchair-bound, heroin-smoking beauty.
What happens when someone already wrestling with his own demons immerses himself in the tragedies of other people's lives? In this case, a lot: a hotdog cart is totalled, a convict sprung, a funeral faked, a head scalped, a horse stolen. Terrible secrets are brought to the light and suicide morphs into murder. Then, just when it looks like Mason is finally going down, he faces the biggest test of all. He'll either become the death-defying hero of his own dreams or lose everything and everybody he's ever loved.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781593762957
ISBN-10: 159376295X
Pagini: 322
Dimensiuni: 140 x 205 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: SOFT SKULL PRESS
ISBN-10: 159376295X
Pagini: 322
Dimensiuni: 140 x 205 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: SOFT SKULL PRESS
Recenzii
Praise for Ghosted
"In spirit of Bishop-Stall's poker-playing protagonist, I made a bet with the author that I could wrap up my review with a four-word sentence capable of encapsulating the 'terrifying,' 'pissed-off,' 'life-affirming,' 'hung-over' quality of Ghosted. I've lost that bet." —Jeff Charis-Carlson, Iowa City Press-Citizen
“This master of immersion journalism opts to give us a novel about a young man who makes a living writing suicide notes. Yes please.” —The National Post, “Most Anticipated Books of 2010”
“Grimly funny, terrifying and tender.” —Montreal Mirror
“The unique voice heard throughout Ghosted is so heartbreakingly authentic. This is a voice whose wry tones are surely as addictive as the drugs abused by the tormented characters in Ghosted. This is a story that you never want to end.” —The Ottawa Citizen
“It leaves you stunned. But then you realize you have just read a terrifying but moving and life-affirming paean to love, friendship, devotion, determination and all those other characteristics that make human beings such wonderfully fascinating creatures in real life and in richly imagined novels like Ghosted.” —The Edmonton Journal
“The characters of Ghosted compose a rogue’s gallery like no other. Most are drug addicted, hopelessly self-destructive, dangerously suicidal or just plain psychotic . . . It is exceedingly difficult to top a hotdog-selling, poker-playing, cocaine-addicted writer of suicide notes whose adventurous, bar-hopping girlfriend Willy is partially paralyzed, confined to a wheelchair and addicted to heroin.” —Calgary Herald
“In Ghosted, love and friendship are real and just as powerful as addiction and nightmares. Despite what the narrator might say, redemption isn't just something confined to bad novels.” —Winnipeg Free Press
“Bishop-Stall is a major talent. His prose is so vivid, you’ll feel the coke seeping down the back of your throat even if you’ve never done a line in your life . . . an unarguably unique voice, urgent and impossible to ignore.” —Now Magazine
“A savage, heartfelt, exhilarating first novel . . . What makes this high-concept premise work is the book’s a) heart, and b) voice. Which may, in the final analysis, be one and the same thing.” —Toro Magazine
“One finishes Ghosted amazed by Shaughnessy Bishop-Stall’s ability to cram three or four novels worth of incident and characters into one book. Impressive, ambitious and exhausting, Ghosted is a novel for those who don’t scare easily.” —Globe and Mail
“Ghosted is not for the faint of heart—in places it's an unflinching exploration of depravity. But it is, above all, an often funny, always optimistic parable of victory over demons of despair, the ghosts of our failed selves.” —Linden MacIntyre, author of The Bishop’s Man
“Bukowski craggy and Hornby sweet . . . a smart book about smart guys who can’t stop from acting dumb. The real pleasure, though, is in the lines: funny sad, funny strange, and funny zing! A hell of a first novel.” —Andrew Pyper, author of The Killing Circle and Lost Girls
"In spirit of Bishop-Stall's poker-playing protagonist, I made a bet with the author that I could wrap up my review with a four-word sentence capable of encapsulating the 'terrifying,' 'pissed-off,' 'life-affirming,' 'hung-over' quality of Ghosted. I've lost that bet." —Jeff Charis-Carlson, Iowa City Press-Citizen
“This master of immersion journalism opts to give us a novel about a young man who makes a living writing suicide notes. Yes please.” —The National Post, “Most Anticipated Books of 2010”
“Grimly funny, terrifying and tender.” —Montreal Mirror
“The unique voice heard throughout Ghosted is so heartbreakingly authentic. This is a voice whose wry tones are surely as addictive as the drugs abused by the tormented characters in Ghosted. This is a story that you never want to end.” —The Ottawa Citizen
“It leaves you stunned. But then you realize you have just read a terrifying but moving and life-affirming paean to love, friendship, devotion, determination and all those other characteristics that make human beings such wonderfully fascinating creatures in real life and in richly imagined novels like Ghosted.” —The Edmonton Journal
“The characters of Ghosted compose a rogue’s gallery like no other. Most are drug addicted, hopelessly self-destructive, dangerously suicidal or just plain psychotic . . . It is exceedingly difficult to top a hotdog-selling, poker-playing, cocaine-addicted writer of suicide notes whose adventurous, bar-hopping girlfriend Willy is partially paralyzed, confined to a wheelchair and addicted to heroin.” —Calgary Herald
“In Ghosted, love and friendship are real and just as powerful as addiction and nightmares. Despite what the narrator might say, redemption isn't just something confined to bad novels.” —Winnipeg Free Press
“Bishop-Stall is a major talent. His prose is so vivid, you’ll feel the coke seeping down the back of your throat even if you’ve never done a line in your life . . . an unarguably unique voice, urgent and impossible to ignore.” —Now Magazine
“A savage, heartfelt, exhilarating first novel . . . What makes this high-concept premise work is the book’s a) heart, and b) voice. Which may, in the final analysis, be one and the same thing.” —Toro Magazine
“One finishes Ghosted amazed by Shaughnessy Bishop-Stall’s ability to cram three or four novels worth of incident and characters into one book. Impressive, ambitious and exhausting, Ghosted is a novel for those who don’t scare easily.” —Globe and Mail
“Ghosted is not for the faint of heart—in places it's an unflinching exploration of depravity. But it is, above all, an often funny, always optimistic parable of victory over demons of despair, the ghosts of our failed selves.” —Linden MacIntyre, author of The Bishop’s Man
“Bukowski craggy and Hornby sweet . . . a smart book about smart guys who can’t stop from acting dumb. The real pleasure, though, is in the lines: funny sad, funny strange, and funny zing! A hell of a first novel.” —Andrew Pyper, author of The Killing Circle and Lost Girls
Descriere
Growing up, Mason Dubisee had a hundred future selves: Jedi. Cowboy. Jedi-cowboy. Explorer. Rock star. Sandinista-Gandhi-Hemingway-Indiana-Jones type thing. But at thirty, he must finally face the truth: He’s a drug-addled drifter, an aspiring novelist unable to move beyond lists of titles and themes.
Desperate, he takes a job as “The Dogfather”—a downtown hot dog vendor. When a mysterious customer hires him to write a very personal letter, he stumbles into a shadow career, ghostwriting suicide notes for the despondent. The gig helps cover his gambling debts but takes an emotional toll. The trouble is, Mason is hardwired to rescue people, and no one needs rescuing more than the suicidal. Except maybe Willy, the heroin-addicted beauty he’s falling for.
What happens when someone wrestling with his own demons immerses himself in other people’s tragedies? Quite a lot: A hotdog cart is totaled, a convict sprung, a funeral faked, a head scalped, a horse stolen. As Mason’s professional and personal lives become entangled, his sanity is tested—as is the line between suicide and murder.
Ghosted is a gritty literary thriller, a black comedy, a high-stakes poker caper, an urban cowboy adventure, and a love story. Bishop-Stall plunges fearlessly into the perilous terrain of drugs, love, and death in this ambitious debut.
Desperate, he takes a job as “The Dogfather”—a downtown hot dog vendor. When a mysterious customer hires him to write a very personal letter, he stumbles into a shadow career, ghostwriting suicide notes for the despondent. The gig helps cover his gambling debts but takes an emotional toll. The trouble is, Mason is hardwired to rescue people, and no one needs rescuing more than the suicidal. Except maybe Willy, the heroin-addicted beauty he’s falling for.
What happens when someone wrestling with his own demons immerses himself in other people’s tragedies? Quite a lot: A hotdog cart is totaled, a convict sprung, a funeral faked, a head scalped, a horse stolen. As Mason’s professional and personal lives become entangled, his sanity is tested—as is the line between suicide and murder.
Ghosted is a gritty literary thriller, a black comedy, a high-stakes poker caper, an urban cowboy adventure, and a love story. Bishop-Stall plunges fearlessly into the perilous terrain of drugs, love, and death in this ambitious debut.