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Loading... The Neon Bibleby John Kennedy Toole
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I cannot believe that John Kennedy Toole wrote this when he was 16 years old!! He had such incredible access to human emotions at such an early age. This book is a simple, yet complex telling of a boy's struggle to live amongst ignorance and poverty. Excellent story. ( )Easy read. Enjoyable tale. This novella is about David and his experience growing up poor in a small, closed minded, Southern town. He lives with his mom and dad and his mom's colorful sister Aunt Mae who comes to live with them. It is a sad tale of people being mistreated by others. It left me feeling sort of hopeless. The Neon Bible is a marvelously well structured, sensitive, and knowing account of growing up in rural Mississippi in the 1940's and 1950's. I was admittedly a little apprehensive about reading it after having enjoyed the over-the-top outrageousness of "A Confederacy of Dunces" so much, but my fears were quickly assuaged by Toole's straightforward prose and masterful handling of his young protagonist's making sense of the small-minded small-town South from which he eventually emerges. Wholly satisfying. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0802132073, Paperback)John Kennedy Toole, who won a posthumous Pulitzer Prize for his best-selling comic masterpiece A Confederacy of Dunces, wrote The Neon Bible for a literary contest at the age of sixteen. The manuscript languished in a drawer and became the subject of a legal battle among Toole's heirs. It was only in 1989, thirty-five years after it was written and twenty years after Toole's suicide at thirty-one, that this amazingly accomplished and evocative novel was freed for publication. The Neon Bible tells the story of David, a young boy growing up in a small Southern town in the 1940s. David's voice is perfectly calibrated, disarmingly funny, sad, shrewd, gathering force from page to page with an emotional directness that never lapses into sentimentality. Through it we share his awkward, painful, universally recognizable encounter with first love, we participate in boy evangelist Bobbie Lee Taylor's revival, we meet the pious, bigoted townspeople. From the opening lines of The Neon Bible, David is fully alive, naive yet sharply observant, drawing us into his world through the sure artistry of John Kennedy Toole. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:15 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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