From Amazon
A coming-of-age story set in Florida in 1967, Edward O'Connor's
Astral Projection concerns a teenager with the ungainly name of Goodwin DeFoe. Our hero comes from a fairly standard dysfunctional family background: at home his parents drink and fight, and his father is given to violent fits of rage. The novel's title comes from DeFoe's attempts to escape this miserable home life through spiritual flight, both literally and figuratively.
Astral Projection is strongest when O'Connor, a freelance writer and short story author living in Toronto, writes about music. DeFoe's passion for the guitar and his lessons with guitar teacher Chuck Buffington draw us in, however briefly, to that universe of two occupied by student and instructor. Here's Buffington explaining the mechanics of tenor saxophonist Lester Young's version of "I Want to Be Happy" to his young charge: "'Hear how that goes? Like you're being all boxed in, and that whole note at the end is the last nail in the coffin. But right then Lester makes his statement--he's gonna be happy. He blows this little four-note announcement--toodle-loo-doot--and he's off like a rabbit.'"
O'Connor is less convincing in his portrayal of the family and DeFoe's "horror-story home life," and even with the introduction of a gun into the plot line the tension never amounts to much more than the equivalent of a flat E-string. Without this tension, Astral Projection remains earthbound, a well-meaning, likable, but ultimately unsatisfying first novel. --Shawn Conner
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
“An original and winning novel…. utterly breathtaking.” --
The Vancouver Sun“O’Connor is adept at isolating the telling moment either through dialogue or description…. No regard for self-respect, charity, or pride is allowed to impede the uncompromising realism of the narrative until the inescapable truth has been stated.” --
The Toronto Star