At the Edge of America - Softcover

Frost, Allen

 
9781945176609: At the Edge of America

Synopsis

Two connected novels (Bagdad Butterfly of Panama, and Waterstories) in one book. Travel through time, life and death, air and water, as you move across a mythical America in this pair of mysterious, poetic adventures. In 1989, Allen Frost wrote these legends in NYC, inspired by the soul of that big city, and the experience of a gothic winter visit to Cape Cod.

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Review

"balloonless with the buffaloes," "what people missed, they dreamed," "the savior and his eden" - the chapter titles read as miniature poems. They evoke miniature worlds. Welcome to the vast and constantly shifting imaginary of Allen Frost. I had heard about Allen Frost before I met him, way back in 1986. My friend Neal told me that this friend of his had written a novel while in high school, called Blue Anthem Wailing... Blue Anthem Wailing, that title haunted me: its rhythm, which seems to build until the penultimate syllable, WAI-ling; its intrigue, which is generated by the synesthesia of the phrase - the anthem has a color; the energy of the phrase, three words that each spark individually, but that generate a flame when strung together. I then began to hear about the content of the book. One of the characters was a man named "Danny" who ran the hot dog stand in the center of a small town and seemed to be a big gaseous, benevolent guy but actually wore a KKK robe beneath his hotdog vendor garb. An America that hides its mendacity behind the face of a gladhanding fool; language and word clusters that intoxicate and even threaten to distract the reader from the narrative, but that are actually crucial incantations that cannot be separated from the multi-layered and constantly morphing worlds of the story -- as a teenager, Allen Frost was already forging key elements of his voice and vision. This voice and vision are in full flower in the two novels contained in At the Edge of America. A hot air balloon travels across North American geography and North American history; a man inhabits the consciousness of a dodo as this creature witnesses invasion and pillage; and we learn what could possibly be meant by the phrase, "Houdini's Arsonist Childhood." Allen Frost territory is one where the dark riddles of the "old, weird America," described by Greil Marcus in his book about Bob Dylan's Th e Basement Tapes, are allowed to roam free and where characters must find love in these haunted landscapes if they are to survive. From the Foreword, by Dan Hanrahan

About the Author

Allen Frost lives in Bellingham, Washington, with wife Laura, daughter Rosa and son Rustle. He was born in La Jolla, California, and graduated from Bowdoin College in Maine. He has lived and worked in Seattle, Washington; Portland, Oregon; and Huron, Ohio. He works in the library at Western Washington University. His Ohio Trio: Fictions appeared in 2001 from Bottom Dog Press, followed by Bowl of Water written between 1989-2002. Another Life is drawn from limited edition poetry chapbooks written 2002-2007. Home Recordings appeared from Bird Dog Publishing in 2010. He contributed an article to the collection d.a.levy and the mimeograph revolution (2008). He is an associate editor of Bottom Dog Press.

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