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Counting Coup
 
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Counting Coup (Paperback)

by Jack Dann (Author)
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2 new from CDN$ 34.14 4 used from CDN$ 0.01 1 collectible from CDN$ 12.05

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Forge books; 1st edition edition (Sep 3 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765301865
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765301864
  • Product Dimensions: 22.8 x 16.2 x 2.1 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 427 g
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Struggling almost from the first page to find its speed, this ungainly road-trip novel is burdened with clich‚s and redundancies, and stumbles along under the weight of stillborn characters until it finally sputters to a halt. Charlie Sarris, an itinerant handyman, is a 60-something veteran of WWII suffering from alcoholism and depression. Toothless and emphysemic, he encounters John Stone, an itinerant Sioux (maybe) medicine man who introduces him to the spiritual world of Indian religion. John persuades Charlie to join him in a vision quest, which involves a sweat lodge ceremony, during which John is confronted by his archenemy, Whiteshirt, a rival shaman, who then spiritually pursues the pair in a wild, drunken chase down the eastern seaboard, where the novel grinds to a nervous halt in a series of highly coincidental and improbable events. Vagueness of setting (Pennsylvania, New York?) and era ('60s, '70s, '80s?) cause frustration, and few plot lines are sustained for more than two or three pages. Contrivance beaches are furnished with both working airplanes and handy twigs is coupled with inconsistency in the presentation of the characters' main traits, and the confusion of internal thought with spoken dialogue produces an implausible narrative. The Indian lore is thin (and specious) and becomes tedious and repetitive early on. This is an ambitious effort that could have incorporated magical realism and mystical notions into a gritty quest to discover the value of life, … la Kerouac and Steinbeck, the two models Dann (The Man Who Melted, etc.) acknowledges in an afterword. Unfortunately, it becomes an endurance test for the reader, who must follow two poorly realized characters as they struggle to make a confused story meaningful.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Description

Charlie Sarris is a fix-it man, a janitor from Binghamton, New York, with no prospects. John Stone is a broken-down Indian medicine man on the road, an itinerant shaman too drunk to practice healing. Together they head out on the biggest binge ever recordeda joyous, wild, tender, heart-stopping quest to confront another shaman who has gone bad. They steal cars, rob stores, drink whiskey, smoke dope, seduce girls; and discover the frightening magic and old powers that are still alive and working in the modern world of highways and electric heating.

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