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The Cold Last Swim: A Novel

The Cold Last Swim: A Novel

Junior Burke
4.2/5 ( ratings)
“Jimmy Dean, clip-on shades and motorcycle boots, walked late onto the set of the General Electric Theater. Cast and crew were there, as was Ronald Reagan, coproducer and actor-host. Jimmy was in character, although not precisely the one he’d signed on to play. He was deep into James Dean, New York stage actor, big screen Technicolor star . . .”

It’s December 1954. During a live television performance of the General Electric Theater, a young James Dean brandishes a pistol at fellow actor Ronald Reagan. Dean goes off script, and what happens next kicks off an alternate history, a “sliding doors” narrative that takes those real events in a slightly different direction. "The Cold Last Swim" features two cultural icons: one who would be dead within a year, immortalized as a symbol of cool rebellion; the other, in a little over a quarter century, would become leader of the free world, the standard bearer of traditional and even fundamentalist values. Each reflects fifties America: Reagan is firmly established among the open freeways and unblemished skies of sunny Los Angeles; Jimmy, emerging from the black-and-white shadows of a rainy New York street.

Told largely from Jimmy's viewpoint, but incorporating a diverse cast of period characters, "The Cold Last Swim" is classical Greek drama: Reagan's Apollo, god of light, warmth, and temperance; Jimmy's Bacchus, license, alienation, and impulse. In this era between the mid-fifties and mid-sixties, we recognize the seeds are being sown for the cultural gulf that divides America today.
Pages
294
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Gibson House Press
Release
May 15, 2020
ISBN
1948721104
ISBN 13
9781948721103

The Cold Last Swim: A Novel

Junior Burke
4.2/5 ( ratings)
“Jimmy Dean, clip-on shades and motorcycle boots, walked late onto the set of the General Electric Theater. Cast and crew were there, as was Ronald Reagan, coproducer and actor-host. Jimmy was in character, although not precisely the one he’d signed on to play. He was deep into James Dean, New York stage actor, big screen Technicolor star . . .”

It’s December 1954. During a live television performance of the General Electric Theater, a young James Dean brandishes a pistol at fellow actor Ronald Reagan. Dean goes off script, and what happens next kicks off an alternate history, a “sliding doors” narrative that takes those real events in a slightly different direction. "The Cold Last Swim" features two cultural icons: one who would be dead within a year, immortalized as a symbol of cool rebellion; the other, in a little over a quarter century, would become leader of the free world, the standard bearer of traditional and even fundamentalist values. Each reflects fifties America: Reagan is firmly established among the open freeways and unblemished skies of sunny Los Angeles; Jimmy, emerging from the black-and-white shadows of a rainy New York street.

Told largely from Jimmy's viewpoint, but incorporating a diverse cast of period characters, "The Cold Last Swim" is classical Greek drama: Reagan's Apollo, god of light, warmth, and temperance; Jimmy's Bacchus, license, alienation, and impulse. In this era between the mid-fifties and mid-sixties, we recognize the seeds are being sown for the cultural gulf that divides America today.
Pages
294
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Gibson House Press
Release
May 15, 2020
ISBN
1948721104
ISBN 13
9781948721103

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