Robert Kirsh, Los Angeles Times-- Nostalgia is a response to a time of despair but its haze can make iron pyrites seem like gold. Vahan Gregory's "Oh Boy, Here Comes Walt!" avoids such distortion. Gregory's episodic account of a young boy's rites of passage in the late '30s, in the small town of Pompton Lakes, N.J., is an extraordinary evocation of the loss of innocence. This is a favored theme in America but few writers have handled it so well. Gregory's narration retains the bittersweet flavor of youth, poignant without sentimentality, sensitive without sensationalism, touched with a sense of immediacy and an unsparing awareness of life and death, love and cruelty. There is the heft and feel of a classic in its pages.
Détails
- Date de publication
- Aug 29, 2004
- Langue
- English
- Catégorie
- Fiction
- Copyright
- Tous droits réservés - Licence de copyright standard
- Contributeurs
- Par (auteur): Vahan Gregory
Caractéristiques
- Pages
- 570
- Type de reliure
- Livre à couverture souple Livre à couverture souple
- Couleur de l’intérieur
- Noir & Blanc
- Dimensions
- Roman (6 x 9 po / 152 x 229 mm)