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Review of CHEROKEE ICE by John T. Biggs

16 Wednesday Mar 2016

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in C.A. Explains It All

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book review, Cherokee Ice, John T Biggs, Liffey Press, magical realism, Native American lore, new books, oklahoma author, Oklahoma Book Award, Pen-L Publishing, Sacred Alarm Clocks

CherokeeIce_front-200

ISBN: 978-1-942428-34-3 (272 pgs) from PEN-L Publishing

What do a dwarf, a holy man and a ghost horse all have in common? –Danny Riley, a mixed-up NDN on the wrong nation’s rez, who may or may not be a witch.

Riley is at the center of writer John T. Biggs’s latest magical realist novel CHEROKEE ICE, which I am excited to learn is a fiction finalist for the 2016 Oklahoma Book Award.

On its surface, the novel is about the rise and fall of a designer drug in several Southwestern states, but at its core it is a family saga that is as much about what we would do for family as what family does to us.

With this book, Biggs proves again that he understands how to ground the magical in the real, be it a young man’s first, awkward sexual encounters or his fraught mother-son relationship.

Biggs also understands the beauty of a well-written prologue. In the taut, three-page scene that opens the book, he manages to create sympathy for an otherwise unsympathetic character, thereby steeping us literally (in-utero) in the main character’s same conflicted emotions. Emotions that are later mirrored in other characters, both major and minor.

One such example is supposed tough-guy Tommy Bracken, a drug dealer whose own addiction to the emotional vulnerability of a sexually sadistic relationship (with Danny’s grandmother, no less) and acute fear of spiders is often at odds with the extreme macho-ism needed to maintain his territory.

In this sea of emotion and drama, characters, over time, begin to merge into each other. Whether it be morphs between fathers and sons, brothers and husbands, drug lackeys or cops, the unpredictable shape-shifting heightens the vision-like quality of the storyline.

One of my favorite vision-like scenes comes in the last quarter of the book, when Lil Bits, the aforementioned dwarf, tries to kill Danny for the second time, this time with the help of silver bullets and a few hired goons.  Pardon the long passage (readers and publisher), but the space is needed to see how Danny works his special kind of mojo:

Green goo covers the African American dwarf’s eyes, spoiling his aim as he fires a silver bullet into the wasp nest on Danny Riley’s pickup truck.

Danny feels the burn of the wasp toxin for the time it takes his heart to shift into overdrive. The nausea clears. Poison tumbles through his  drug factory enzymes and winds up in his brain, where it’s a lot different than it started out.  Danny Riley suddenly understands that bullets aren’t nearly as dangerous as wasps.

His wasp-sisters’ poison doesn’t turn into visions inside Little Bits’ hired killers. They have their pistols out, squeezing shots off this way and that, filling the air with projectiles than fly off to lodge in buildings and automobiles and maybe an innocent bystander or two.

Clouds of nitrate-flavored smoke don’t hinder Danny or  his wasp-sisters at all. Gunpowder residue tastes as sweet as nectar on his lips. It doesn’t burn his eyes or dull his vision. Everything is crystal clear, broken into a thousand pieces Washed in rainbows, as if Danny is gazing at the world through a cut diamond lens.

Danny Riley knows he is not a wasp, as much as he knows anything, but he is moving too fast to think about it clearly. Faster than thoughts, faster than all the reasons a man can’t move this fast. Faster than Little Bits can take aim through the haze of smoke and vomit and superstition.

The African American dwarf empties his revolver of silver bullets, tries to make one land on Danny, who is moving around him the way a swam of hornets attacks a marauding bear.

Danny snatches the pistol out of Little Bits’ hand. Throws it at one of the Italian killers. Hits him square in the face. Knocks him out as he fires his pistol one last time and shoots his partner in the knee.

Little Bits takes off running down the center of the street, screaming for one of his two silver Jesuses to save him from witches and wasps.

cropped-header_john_bw1The situation only gets more complicated after that, and what a wild ride to get to the conclusion!

That said, I felt that the ending, which was satisfying in its own way, needed to go just one step farther with Danny by letting his newfound courage bring him back into his own identity.

All in all, though, another great book from Biggs, who also has a new short story collection out from Liffey Press, called appropriately, SACRED ALARM CLOCKS. The collection made the best selling Oklahoma Writers list in February.

For more news on his writing, check out johnbiggsoklahomawriter.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Explorations in Magical Realism

13 Wednesday Aug 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in C.A. Explains It All

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A Year of Magical Reading, Aimee Bender, Goodreads, Hold That Thought, Isabel Allende, Karen Rusell, Kelly Link, Kevin Sloan, magical realism, Magical Realism Blog Hop, magical realism in YA, middle grade magical realism, St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves, Ted Gioia, The Bat Segundo Show, The House of the Spirits, Tin House Writer's Workshop, Tomek Setowski, Women on writing, Zoe Brooks

Magic-Realism-Tomek-Setowski-Poland-12

from Polish painter Tomek Setowski‘s “Magical Realism” series

I first came to magical realism through Isabel Allende‘s absorbing novel The House of the Spirits, which features a haunting cast of star-crossed misfits, including the green-haired, golden-eyed ‘Rosa the beautiful’ and her strange, also clairvoyant, younger sister Clara. My paperback has endured so many readings that it has developed its own, almost biblical sheen. It remains one of my all-time favorite books and is definitely on my desert island list.

Recentlywww.randomhouse.com, I’ve fallen in love with the work of Karen Russell, whose skill with a sentence is breath-taking, both as a short story writer and a novelist.  If you haven’t become acquainted with her work just yet, click on over to this Sunday Sentence post for a delicious short from her collection St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves.

Then tune up your ears for her fab Writer’s Workshop podcast over at Tin House, where she shares tips on building up impossible worlds and makes it sound easy.

 

Aimee Bendimageser also has some helpful craft tips and thougindexhts on the genre in an interview at The Bat Segundo Show. Your next must-listen is then Hold That Thought’s “A Conversation with Kelly Link and William McKelvy” hosted by Washington Univ.

Next, you’ll want to block off some time to wade through all the goodies at Zoe Brooks‘ Magical Realism blog. Besides a massive reading list with some reviews, she has Facebook & Goodreads groups and a kicking bloghop/linkup just begging for your perusal.

 

You might also want to read up on:

painting by Kevin Sloan

painting by “Magical Realist” artist Kevin Sloan

Magical Realism in YA       and

Trends in Middle-grade Magical Realism.

Also interesting is a 2012 blog project called A Year of Magical Reading in which Ted Gioia explores “non-realism” in fiction.

 

And last but not least, visit the Women on Writing (WOW) blog for a handy shortlist of resources, including links to books on craft and scholarship for those who want to delve deeper.

 

**Tell me about your favorite Magical Realism reads or share your resources and finds in the comments section. Love hearing from you.  Happy reading!!!!!

 

 

 

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Sunday Sentence #10

03 Sunday Aug 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in Sunday Sentence

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David Abrams, Florida writers, Karen Russell, magical realism, short stories, St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves, Sunday Sentence, Women writers, Z.Z.'s Sleep Away Camp for Disordered Dreamers

imagesMy weekly contribution to David Abrams’ “Sunday Sentence” project in which participants share the best sentence read during the past week “out of context and without commentary.”

I was expecting some ineffable girl smell, dewy and secret, an eau.

SOURCE:Karen Russell‘s short story collection St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves  (from “Z.Z.’s Sleep-Away Camp for Disordered Dreamers“)

 

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Review of OWL Dreams by John T. Biggs

09 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in C.A. Explains It All

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book review, John T Biggs, magical realism, Native American lore, new books, oklahoma author, Owl Dreams

ISBN: 978-0985127473
(292 pgs)
from Pen-L Publishing
4.5 stars (on a scale of 5)

Owl Dreams is one of those novels that defies easy description. Like Gabaldon’s famous genre-bending series, it is a meld of many forms, with elements of mystery, romance and Southwestern lore that blend seamlessly into a wild, urban operetta.

Action centers around Sarah Bible, straight-laced anthropology major, who is the daughter of a manic depressive and the one sane voice in a tale of circus freaks, voodoo gods, shapeshifters, NDN witches, criminals and crazies.

The storyline is so beautifully strange and the author’s ability to inhabit his characters’ (often addled minds) so keen, that the reader is gripped and propelled from page to page with growing obsession.

You’ll find yourself rooting for the oddest of characters and may even begin to question your own grip on reality as the story moves along. This is all part of the fun, and a testimony to the skill of the author.

cropped-header_john_bw1 I first encountered Biggs in the short form and was not surprised to see that he has accumulated several awards for his fiction.  He has clearly sharpened his teeth there and has now delivered a gorgeous first novel that I highly recommend.

Get your copy at Amazon.com, Barnes & Nobles or Pen-L Publishing.

And follow johnbiggsoklahomawriter.com for more news on his writing.

 

***If you’re a writer and would like YOUR book reviewed, please drop me a line at bonesparkblog@yahoo.com. I am especially interested in small press publications, both fiction and poetry.

 

 

 

 

 

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