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Loading... The Book of Flying (2004)by Keith Miller
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This is the tale of Pico, a lonely librarian who goes on a quest to find his wings. There were some disturbing bits, some touching bits, some amusing bits, and some rather sad bits. I liked it a lot. ( ) What might seem like a fairly straightforward quest involving Pico the librarian loving and losing his winged Sisi and going out on a quest to find his own wings or die trying quickly turns into one of the best Story-within-Story books I've read in a long time. Why? Because he's a hopeless poet and a hapless adventurer. He's full of quirky stories told semi-inappropriately, falling in with bandits, having tea with minotaurs, and being lonely in young, vibrant crowds. Falling in love with literary and tightrope-walking whores. And a whole beautiful and disturbing section about eating. :) But more than all this, all the language is lyrical, poetical in instance, structure, and overarching plot. It's about finally earning his wings. And what the hell does that even mean? He doesn't know, either. The book is so damn sad and sweet and it pulls your soul apart. Every character is full of tragedy. Every character is full of love. There's no way I can describe this without just telling you folks to READ IT. You'll know. Deep down. It's one of those works that speak to writers and deep readers of any caliber. The process of the discovery, the reveling in the imagination, the dark recesses, the loving ones, the sheer irrepressible dive into stories, stories, and more stories. How they define us, the stories we own, the stories we steal, the stories we give away, and the stories that are inherited, blown up, or die. I can recommend this book forever and a day if that appeals to you at all. And maybe, after much questing, you too can fly... if you can stomach the cost. :) I probably should have made a better attempt to read this book. The writing is lovely, and the plot is pretty neat. This is a very slow, drift-y book. Some books work very well in that mold, but this one didn't click for me. When the protagonist starts out on an epic quest and then ends up right where he started forty pages later, I have to question some narrative decisions. This book was definitely aiming for a fairytale quality. Like Catherynne M Valente's work, or The Last Unicorn. But it misses, both in terms of character and plot. no reviews | add a review
When Pico falls in love with one of the winged people in the City by the Sea, the orphaned young librarian embarks on a quest to find the mythical Morning Town, a magical place where those like him who are wingless may gain their wings. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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