Deathfear and Dreamscape

Front Cover
WestBow Press, Apr 27, 2011 - Biography & Autobiography - 320 pages

The narrator of this book, although blind, deaf, and paralyzed, interacts with a strange set of fictional characters who move about the fictional city of Nashville, Tennessee. A car salesman loves the smell of napalm in the morning. A sergeant pushes everyone out of his flying machine. A doctor finds two people living in the same body. A teacher forces a student to undergo an eyeball transplantation. A theologian claims that Jesus loves lesbians best of all. A cheerleader has a melon where her head should be. A pedophile exorcizes a demon. A minister fights evil by stabbing sinners to death. One man fathers a thousand children but his family does not show up for Sunday dinner. Real people mix with the fictional characters. Bob Hope holds the narrator's hand. James Earle Ray spends the night with a minister. Dinah Shore blows kisses and Jack Palance guns down a farmer. Kronos and his brothers move to Nashville to play football. Lamar Alexander digs up a coffin, pries open the lid, and shouts, "It's alive." Romance softens the gore. One character rejects Prince Charming while her brother falls deeply in love with a woman who does not exist. Two lovebirds pitch woo by drilling holes in each other's skulls. A grand denouement weaves all these storylines together in a beautiful tapestry, but the reader must avoid the splatter of bright red blood.

This is the best book written in English since Dante's Towering Inferno.
Professor, School of Letters, University of the South

This book is so complicated that it makes Tolstoy's War and Peace read like a Marvel comic book.
Henry Hammer, Department of Neurology, Gorrie School of Medicine

 

Contents

Body
1
Back matter
310
Back Cover
311
Spine
312
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

The author studied medicine and neurology at the University of Florida in Gainesville. He was a neurologist at the Nashville Veterans Hospital and at Vanderbilt School of Medicine for many years. After semi-retirement, he studied law and divinity. He obtained a Master of Fine Arts degree from the Unversity of the South, writing about medicine (all too true) and murder (all fiction thankfully). During his 72 years he has met many interesting people, most of whom have morphed into fictional characters for this book. He now works as the only neurologist at a Christian clinic which only sees people who have no medical insurance. He appreciates the ironies of life; for example, the number of patients at the clinic increased after the passage of a law that guaranteed free medical insurance to everyone. Those who use their rational minds and see ironies experience life as a comedy, a series of hilarious anecdotes. Those who feel find life an unrelenting, unbearable tragedy.

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