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Queen Of The Silver Dollar

Queen Of The Silver Dollar

Edward Hower
0/5 ( ratings)
Oversized June Chatwin, a 21-year-old who wears a big black Stetson, is good at listening to other people's problems -- a good thing since the former rodeo rider, general outsider and recovering alcoholic has landed herself at a Connecticut asylum so elitist that the inmates are referred to by the staff as guests and the hospital stationery reads The Pines... An Inn. Sober for the first time in years, she takes new pleasure in learning about other peoples' lives, and she's surrounded by fascinating personalities: a screenwriter whose one smashing success no one remembers; a ballplayer with the weight of Harlem on his shoulders; and Jack, a native New Englander who assures her just after they meet that she's not ridiculous, the most romantic words she's ever heard. With all her energies focused on others, however, how will June find the time to focus on her own past -- which includes getting gang raped on the bar of a gin mill -- and her gay brother's attempted suicide? Hower's fifth novel is frequently amusing and insightful, although lack and June both seem much older than in their 20s. The questions that unfold are emotionally charged: Will they become lovers or friends within the confines of the country dub/institution? Will their relationship survive in the real world if and when they both get out? Readers will root for June as she learns that the best therapy often comes from other patients rather than from professionals. More importantly, she learns from her friendship with Jack that the biggest ghosts from our pasts are often ourselves.
Language
English
Format
Hardcover
Release
September 01, 1997
ISBN 13
9781877946929

Queen Of The Silver Dollar

Edward Hower
0/5 ( ratings)
Oversized June Chatwin, a 21-year-old who wears a big black Stetson, is good at listening to other people's problems -- a good thing since the former rodeo rider, general outsider and recovering alcoholic has landed herself at a Connecticut asylum so elitist that the inmates are referred to by the staff as guests and the hospital stationery reads The Pines... An Inn. Sober for the first time in years, she takes new pleasure in learning about other peoples' lives, and she's surrounded by fascinating personalities: a screenwriter whose one smashing success no one remembers; a ballplayer with the weight of Harlem on his shoulders; and Jack, a native New Englander who assures her just after they meet that she's not ridiculous, the most romantic words she's ever heard. With all her energies focused on others, however, how will June find the time to focus on her own past -- which includes getting gang raped on the bar of a gin mill -- and her gay brother's attempted suicide? Hower's fifth novel is frequently amusing and insightful, although lack and June both seem much older than in their 20s. The questions that unfold are emotionally charged: Will they become lovers or friends within the confines of the country dub/institution? Will their relationship survive in the real world if and when they both get out? Readers will root for June as she learns that the best therapy often comes from other patients rather than from professionals. More importantly, she learns from her friendship with Jack that the biggest ghosts from our pasts are often ourselves.
Language
English
Format
Hardcover
Release
September 01, 1997
ISBN 13
9781877946929

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