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Tropic of Orange

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"David Foster Wallace meets Gabriel Garcia Marquez" in this novel set in a dystopian Los Angeles from a National Book Award finalist (Publishers Weekly).

Irreverently juggling magical realism, film noir, hip hop, and chicanismo, Tropic of Orange takes place in a Los Angeles where the homeless, gangsters, infant organ entrepreneurs, and Hollywood collide on a stretch of the Harbor Freeway. Hemmed in by wildfires, it's a symphony conducted from an overpass, grandiose, comic, and as diverse as the city itself—from an author who has received the California Book Award and the Association for Asian American Studies Book Award, among other literary honors.

"Fiercely satirical . . . Yamashita presents [an] intricate plot with mordant wit." —The New York Times Book Review

"A stunner . . . An exquisite mystery novel. But this is a novel of dystopia and apocalypse; the mystery concerns the tragic flaws of human nature." —Library Journal (starred review)

"Brilliant . . . An ingenious interpretation of social woes." —Booklist (starred review)
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    • Booklist

      August 1, 1997
      The second installment in an invaluable three-volume collection of a neglected American original presents seven of Metcalf's inspired and spirited textual collages. Deeply immersed in American history and the paradoxes of our culture, Metcalf stretches narrative beyond traditional limits in an attempt to give voice to the cacophony of the past, the clamoring of the present, and the mind's quicksilver processing of memory, thought, and fantasy. To that end, his writing is boldly improvisational and sporadically surreal, sparking with shifting emotions and perspectives. Metcalf describes his complex style in the introduction to "I-57," a wonderfully inventive chronicle of an interstate journey across Illinois on I-57: "Not a poem, not a novel, not a journal, yet at times some or all of these." Other works include a tribute to Willie Mays; "Zip Odes"(a set of poems to each state and the District of Columbia); and compositions about Columbus' encounter with Native Americans and about the Civil War. ((Reviewed Aug. 1997))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1997, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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