A Woman Named Drown: A Novel

! A Woman Named Drown: A Novel ↠ PDF Download by * Padgett Powell eBook or Kindle ePUB Online free. A Woman Named Drown: A Novel Five Stars Powell never fails to engage me and this book is no exception.. A Woman Named Drown maymadre I have just discovered Padgett Powells books and am glad I did. Great writer and great intertainment. Mr. Powell kept me laughing and crying through out the book.Cant wait to read his other work.]

A Woman Named Drown: A Novel

Author :
Rating : 4.87 (696 Votes)
Asin : 148046421X
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 178 Pages
Publish Date : 2015-07-05
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

Five Stars Powell never fails to engage me and this book is no exception.. A Woman Named Drown maymadre I have just discovered Padgett Powell's books and am glad I did. Great writer and great intertainment. Mr. Powell kept me laughing and crying through out the book.Can't wait to read his other work.

Before he knows it, they’re heading farther south together—to Florida—where the data that the dropout scientist is collecting from life’s laboratory is about to get quite contradictory.Richly influenced by offbeat literary giant Donald Barthelme, Padgett Powell’s A Woman Named Drown offers readers a smorgasbord of literary strangeness—a surreal series of adventures in which nothing much—and yet everything—happens at once.  . Hailed by Time as an “extravagantly comic” novel, A Woman Named Drown is a wild and strange journey through America’s South that follows a young PhD dropout who falls in with an amateur actress–cum-pool sharkOn the brink of earning his doctorate in chemistry, the unnamed narrator decides to chuck it all away in favor of real life. So begins an odd pilgrimage through the American South. In Tennessee, our hero is bewitched by an older, gin-swilling, pool-playing sometimes-actress who claims to have recently starred in a theatrical production about a “woman named Drown.” He moves in with her and just as quickly begin

. While Powell's ear for Southern speech is impeccable, the dialogue goes nowhere, and the narration is bogged down in murky philosophizing about life as a series of scientific chain reactions or as theater of the absurd. The narrator explains his reaction-series theory of existence in pseudoscientific language that slows an already nearly inert story. The idiosyncracies of style that were endearing in Edisto are labored here to excess, and the book's campy tone becomes irritating early on. His second book does not live up to expectations. The slim tale, narrated by a young man who abandons his doctorate program in chemistry to amass instead "lab notes of life," consists of a series of picaresque encounters w

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