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The Free Fall of Webster Cummings

par Tom Bodett, Tom Bodett

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In this epic drama from beloved radio personality Tom Bodett, a host of unforgettable characters from the end of the road - Alaska - venture to the lower 48 to discover an America they barely recognize. The first to arrive is Ed Flannigan, who has one arm, no job, and not a clue about how to get on with his life. Somehow he winds up in Quartz Creek, Oregon, contending with New Age colonists, organic vegetables, and a cranky old farmer who gives him peculiar and good advice about growing peaches. Meanwhile, Lloyd and Evelyn Decker leave home and hit the road in a powder blue Road Ranger to find their wayward children; Oliver the Dreamer, a soft-spoken amnesiac, finds a home and a family under a bridge in Seattle; and Webster Cummings, a statistical research analyst, survives a fall from a commuter plane to bring together these and other strange and wonderful characters for an unexpected revelation that alters all their lives.… (plus d'informations)
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3 sur 3
This book is about a man who falls from the sky and decides to find himself on the way down. I think that this book had a great beginning but the ending fizzled out and got lost somewhere. I think that the author may have turned out the light as he wrote the last few pages or just got tired and decided he was done writing .
This hard back book was acquire from the McKay's free bin ( )
  sallyawolf | Feb 25, 2013 |
The Freefall of Webster Cummings
When trying to classify “The Freefall of Webster Cummings,” the reader will have a hard time distinguishing it. The book is really funny and very witty, but it also has a very serious and sentimental edge. It is mostly driven by its characters. It is hardly realistic, but it never quite stretches into fantasy, as all the events, while incredibly improbable, are possible.

Through the first few chapters, the book introduces over 5 parallel stories featuring different characters that seem to have never met. Throughout each of their stories the author slowly develops these characters, most importantly often pointing out a flaw of theirs or a conflict in their life. Starting with the centerpiece characters, the book introduces Ed Flannigan, a witty, cynical, one-armed man with a way of pointing out the downside of everything with his jokes, Webster Cummings, who never knew his family but was called the luckiest man alive for his incredible survival of falling off a plane, and Oliver, a homeless man who oddly enough seems to be the most content with his life. Other interesting and quirky characters add extra humor and charisma, with such as the Bedfinger-Hooples, a married couple who ended up living thousands of miles away from each other because they felt their jobs were too important and some incredibly exaggeratedly strange characters that are friends of Oliver, the homeless man. These extras really help bring the story together, even if they are not involved in its major events. The reader soon learns that all of these characters, whether important or not, have a hole of some sorts in their lives that they are trying desperately to fill one way or another. It is usually this very thing that leads the characters to each other. In particular, Webster’s search for his family leads him to the Flannigans, because they are actually fairly close relatives of his.
Through a couple of intentionally ridiculously exaggerated (but well written) and even almost superhuman events, all of these characters are tied together, either through a relationship they did not know they had or simply coincidental circumstances. By the time Webster discovers that Ed Flannigan was his unknown cousin, an old gypsy they met was his unknown mother, and Oliver, the old, happy city tramp was his unknown father the story is hardly believable at all.
However, if this book’s exaggerated story is what the reader remembers the most from this book, then the reader did not take from it what he was supposed to. The most important aspect of this book is the well crafted characters and plot line, with the exaggerated events only acting as supplements to keep the reader interested. Although the book sometimes suffers from its own ambition to introduce so many characters at once and try to find a solution for all of them, Bodett succeeds with such a difficult undertaking better than anyone else could. With the help of a slightly fantasized plot and set of characters, Bodett delivers one of the funniest, quirkiest, and yet most sincere books I have read in a long time.
  Srapkins | Aug 25, 2010 |
This book is about a man who falls from the sky and decides to find himself on the way down. I think that this book had a great beginning but the ending fizzled out and got lost somewhere. I think that the author may have turned out the light as he wrote the last few pages or just got tired and decided he was done writing .
This hard back book was acquire from the McKay's free bin. ( )
  sallyawolf | Jun 24, 2010 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Tom Bodettauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Bodett, Tomauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé

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In this epic drama from beloved radio personality Tom Bodett, a host of unforgettable characters from the end of the road - Alaska - venture to the lower 48 to discover an America they barely recognize. The first to arrive is Ed Flannigan, who has one arm, no job, and not a clue about how to get on with his life. Somehow he winds up in Quartz Creek, Oregon, contending with New Age colonists, organic vegetables, and a cranky old farmer who gives him peculiar and good advice about growing peaches. Meanwhile, Lloyd and Evelyn Decker leave home and hit the road in a powder blue Road Ranger to find their wayward children; Oliver the Dreamer, a soft-spoken amnesiac, finds a home and a family under a bridge in Seattle; and Webster Cummings, a statistical research analyst, survives a fall from a commuter plane to bring together these and other strange and wonderful characters for an unexpected revelation that alters all their lives.

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