Kamis, 17 September 2015

The Guild of Saint Cooper, by Shya Scanlon

The Guild of Saint Cooper, by Shya Scanlon

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The Guild of Saint Cooper, by Shya Scanlon

The Guild of Saint Cooper, by Shya Scanlon



The Guild of Saint Cooper, by Shya Scanlon

Read Online Ebook The Guild of Saint Cooper, by Shya Scanlon

An obscure author, drawn in by the mysterious Guild of St. Cooper, must rewrite the history of a dying city. But the changes become greater than those he set out to make, and the story quickly unspools backward into an alternate history—a world populated by giant rhododendrons, space aliens, and TV's own Special Agent Dale Cooper.

An editor at The Nervous Breakdown and co-founder of Monkey Bicycle, Shya Scanlon won the John Hawkes Prize in Fiction at Brown University, where he received his MFA. He lives in New York.

The Guild of Saint Cooper, by Shya Scanlon

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1500082 in Books
  • Brand: Scanlon, Shya
  • Published on: 2015-05-12
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.40" h x 1.20" w x 5.50" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 350 pages
The Guild of Saint Cooper, by Shya Scanlon

Review "Just when I thought I'd had my fill of dystopian novels, along comes the The Guild of Saint Cooper; a playful, imaginative, and wildly unpredictable ride through alternate Seattle. Scanlon delights in turning history on its ear in this daring and thoughtful high wire act of a novel." —Jonathan Evison, author of West of Here and The Revised Fundamentals of CaregivingPraise for Border Run:"Like a Philip K. Dick of the American Southwest, or a futuristic Cormac McCarthy." —Ben Loory, author of Stories for Nightttime and Some for the Day"Strikes a flawless balance between satire and heart, adventure adn meditation." —Laura Van Den Berg, author The Isle of YouthPraise for Forecast:"Shya Scanlon's brilliant first novel inhabits the skin of science fiction while setting off fireworks more extravagantly imagined and coolly displayed than those ever fired into the night air by any conventional SF novel." —Peter Straub, author of Lost Boy, Lost Girl and Black House"Tipping its hat to authors like Stacey Levine, China Miéville and Jonathan Lethem, Scanlon's novel is part Science Fiction, part noir, part road narrative and part love story." —Brian Evenson, author of Altmann's Tongue and The Wavering KnifePraise for In This Alone Impulse:"If Gertrude Stein ran track for Mineola Prep, she'd text these alert, convivial poems from the team bus." —Joyelle McSweeney, author of The Red Bird and Nylund: The Sarcographer

About the Author Shya Scanlon is the author of the novels Border Run and Forecast, and the poetry collection In This Alone Impulse. An editor at The Nervous Breakdown and co-founder of Monkey Bicycle, he won the John Hawkes Prize in Fiction at Brown University, where he received his MFA. He lives in New York.


The Guild of Saint Cooper, by Shya Scanlon

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Most helpful customer reviews

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful. An Edgy, Near Future Apocalyptic Fiction Novel From A Young Master By John Kwok In "The Guild of Saint Cooper" Shya Scanlon offers us a crazy, twisted, near future apocalyptic novel about Seattle that reads like early Philip K. Dick mixed with early China Mieville and early Haruki Murakami. Scanlon seems to have had as much fun as Matt Ruff did in creating his vivid, richly imagined, dark satirical alternative history speculative fiction novel "The Mirage", in invoking the spirits of the television show "Twin Peaks" with more than a few twists and turns reminiscent of "The X-Files". Much to his credit, Scanlon seems to have developed - and more so than any of his peers in mainstream literary fiction - a very good sense of the weirder aspects of dystopian speculative fiction that could be ranked alongside the weird fiction conjured by Mieville and Jeff VanderMeer, among others. Though the novel is set primarily in and around Seattle, WA, Scanlon sends his protagonist - who may be a fictionalized version of himself - off on a brief trip to New York City, describing the Lower East Side in a manner more consistent with Mieville's prose than Paul Auster's, in a manner reminiscent too of William Gibson's "Blue Ant" trilogy ("Pattern Recognition", "Spook Country" and "Zero History"), but with a bit more dark humor and satire than what one encounters in Gibson's post 9/11 trilogy. If more mainstream literary fiction writers opted to look around the edges of both mainstream literary and speculative fiction as Scanlon is doing here, I would be more interested in reading their work. Until then, I suspect I'll be enjoying reading more of Scanlon's, especially when he may become as fine a writer as Mieville and Murakami are now.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. like many writers By Terreciel This is a near-future post-apocalyptic story set in Seattle, where I live, so I was especially interested in it. It's written from Blake's point of view. He's a struggling writer given to angst and introspection, like many writers. Scanlon's writing style is genearlly good, with occassional metaphoric clunkers like "Her long white hair fell loose around her narrow shoulders, coating them with snow," or "a T-shirt so filthy its fabric resembled the skin of an animal."The storyline jumps around and was difficult to follow but I carried on because it was intriguing enough that I wanted to see where it went. It just got weirder and weirder, which would have been ok too, until the end that wasn't really an end. Nothing got resolved, I never did figure out what it was all about. I won't go into more detail so as not to spoil it.

1 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Difficult and I love it By budababy What a totally involving, difficult, great book to read. I love novels that twist and turn, don't follow a straight line, make you think, make you figure out what is going on, while immersing you in a realistic, dystopian world. The book goes backward while the story goes forward. Where you end is not where you started even though it is. Don't read this book if you want easy answers. Do read it if you want to puzzle it out and accept that you might be making your own answers. Would I like to talk to the author and have him explain it all to me? Yes. But then it would be ruined - MY experience of it would be ruined.

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The Guild of Saint Cooper, by Shya Scanlon

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