Photo de l'auteur

Corey Mesler

Auteur de Talk: A Novel in Dialogue

33+ oeuvres 113 utilisateurs 5 critiques 2 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Corey Mesler

Crédit image: Reading. Photo by David Tankersley.

Œuvres de Corey Mesler

Talk: A Novel in Dialogue (2002) 16 exemplaires
We Are Billion Year Old Carbon (2005) 13 exemplaires
Following Richard Brautigan (2010) 12 exemplaires
Memphis Movie: A Novel (2015) 8 exemplaires
Listen: 29 Short Conversations (2008) 5 exemplaires
The Hole in Sleep (2006) 4 exemplaires
The Lita Conversation (2006) 3 exemplaires
Some Identity Problems (2008) 3 exemplaires
Short Story & Other Short Stories (2006) 3 exemplaires
As a Child (2014) 3 exemplaires
Gardner Remembers: The Lost Tapes (2011) 3 exemplaires
The Tense Past 3 exemplaires
The Sky Needs More Work (2014) 2 exemplaires
Chin-Chin in Eden 2 exemplaires
Before the Great Troubling: Poems (2011) 2 exemplaires
Grit (2009) 2 exemplaires
The Chloe Poems (2007) 2 exemplaires
The Agoraphobe's Pandiculations (2008) 2 exemplaires
Dark on Purpose (2011) 2 exemplaires
Publisher 1 exemplaire
Ten Poets 1 exemplaire
The Travels of Cocoa Poem Lorry (2013) 1 exemplaire
Piecework 1 exemplaire
Alphabeticon 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

New Stories from the South 2002: The Year's Best (2002) — Contributeur — 31 exemplaires
Wtf?! (2011) — Contributeur — 9 exemplaires
Beechwood Review Issue 1 — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires
Skive The Short Story Quarterly: Issue 10, December 2008 (2008) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1955-07-20
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Niagara Falls, New York, USA
Lieux de résidence
Memphis, Tennessee, USA
Professions
book store owner

Membres

Critiques

Frank is working on his time machine and arrives in het sexuality laden fantasy. But he gets stuck and invents a new life. Can he come back or not. This is an interesting theme for a story, which got me to read to the end.
However Franks sexual obsession told by the stories he write is weird. And not all erotic. For the story the very explicit sexual encounters are not really necessary. All in all a weird book.
 
Signalé
aleene | 1 autre critique | Feb 13, 2013 |
Decent writing, but some of the punctuation seemed a little weird. I received an electronic copy as part of a Member Giveaway and it was listed as erotica. There seemed to be too much of a disconnect between the erotic parts and the rest of the story. Those parts weren't very descriptive and I personally wouldn't classify it as erotica.
 
Signalé
NSchumacher85 | 1 autre critique | Dec 15, 2012 |
I genuinely adored this poignant and creatively dazzling novel by Corey Mesler who takes head-on a major narrative challenge and elegantly succeeds with it. This novel is a paen to youth. This particular young peripatetic writer, Jack, is haunted by the ghost of San Francisco poet and novelist, Richard Brautigan, and the story line develops around this intriguing conceit. In a sense the creativity of Jack is inspired by his creative mentor and ultimately symbolizes the victory of creativity over death in Brautigan and the young man. They both are deeply engaged in an existential pursuit -- how can one live amid so much futility, inauthenticity and the mindblowing endgame of death? What is the meaning of life and wherein does its value reside? For them the pursuit involves immersion into the experience of life itself -- not merely surviving, but living life fully. The young man's earnest and possibly quixotic striving leads him from woman to woman in a quest for real love. For how can life be lived fully without earth shattering love? The existential quest also takes them on the road and readers will sense the literary connection to Kerouac as well as to Ferlinghetti and Farina in "FRB." Jack's Big Idea is simply to live and to avoid or trade-off inauthentic life, as much as possible, for living with meager pecuniary means in the Now. I admire the young man's sincerity and integrity in his dogged, imaginative pursuit of a meaningful existence. It's clealry not all fun and games and the ending is also poignant: it left me wondering where other travels would lead Jack down the Great American Highway of Existence. The comedy in the narrative, especially the Lone Ranger joke, by his well-named brother, Lark, left me laughing out loud repeatedly. Initially, as the story is narrated in the first-person singular, I was concerned that the narrative would become overly self-indulgent. But wisely the author backs away from the creative dangers manifest in a first-person narrative style and focused on his ghostly foil, a daunting proposition which the author manages to pull off authentically. I was much impressed by Mesler's way with words and his daunting vocabulary amid a highly accessible, narrative structure. I enjoyed the realism of the dialogue and the round nuances of the primary characters. I had to laugh as Jack tried so valiantly and dutifully to steer customers in his bookstore away from pervasive, best-selling, commercial pap into the truly great books by the geniuses whom he respected. One can sense the sentiment of the author for each of the women with whom Jack and Richard tarry. I felt as if I had received intellectually well beyond my investment in reading this pithy, wise and profound novel. I sincerely entreat you to read "Following Richard Brautigan" as the odds are high that you will see yourself as a youth in your personal existential quest on every page of this great, dense, big-hearted and welcoming novel.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
WordsworthGreen | Feb 24, 2012 |
Cette critique a été rédigée par l'auteur .
My first full-length collection of which I am proud.
 
Signalé
coreymesler |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
33
Aussi par
5
Membres
113
Popularité
#173,161
Évaluation
½ 4.3
Critiques
5
ISBN
29
Favoris
2

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