Itemize Books Supposing Angels

Original Title: Angels
ISBN: 0099440830 (ISBN13: 9780099440833)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Jamie Mays and Bill Houston
Literary Awards: Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction (1984)
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Angels Paperback | Pages: 209 pages
Rating: 3.73 | 5044 Users | 317 Reviews

Declare Containing Books Angels

Title:Angels
Author:Denis Johnson
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 209 pages
Published:March 6th 2003 by Vintage (first published August 12th 1983)
Categories:Fiction. Thriller. Novels. Suspense. Mystery. Drama

Explanation Toward Books Angels

‘A dazzling and savage first novel’ New York Times

Angels tells the story of two born losers. Jamie has ditched her husband and is running away with her two baby girls. Bill is dreaming of making it big in a life of crime. They meet on a Greyhound bus and decide to team up.

So begins a stunning, tragic odyssey through the dark underbelly of America – the bars, bus stations, mental wards, and prisons that play host to Jamie and Bill as they find themselves trapped in a downward spiral though rape, alcohol, drugs and crime, to madness and death.

From the author of Tree of Smoke , winner of the National Book Award for Fiction

Rating Containing Books Angels
Ratings: 3.73 From 5044 Users | 317 Reviews

Judgment Containing Books Angels
Bill Houston was experimenting with his butane lighter, holding it upside down and trying to keep it lit. The gas wants to go up, he explained to her, but then it has to go down before it can go up. It dont know what to do.Like so much fluid in a cheap plastic Bic, our lives flow along paths equally perplexing and predictable. We dont know what to do either, but to whatever depths we sink and however high we rise, most of it can probably be chalked up to circumstance. Wherever we end up and

Very occasionally I come across a book that has such an impact on me that I wonder how could it have taken so long for me to discover and read it. Sadly also, it was because of Denis Johnson's recent death that I uncovered it, from the forum in the TLS of The Guardian. In there a contributor wrote that it was more powerful than Train Dreams, and I was hooked in - how could it be?The story is about Bill Houston, an ex-con living on his wits and petty crime in Chicago dreaming of the criminal big

Denis Johnson's vision of spirituality in a fallen world holds an intense fascination for me. This is a novel about broken-down, desperate, miserable characters and yet- and yet - they somehow walk with divine grace. Johnson is unflinching in his depiction of the circles of hell through which they travel (one scene in particular is among the most disturbing I have ever endured) but at the core of the novel, beyond the ultimate hell- the hell of the self- is a sense of hope both elusive and,

The last chapter is a hard one. The characters are no "angels" and they continue down a slippery slope at a very rapid pace. This is not a story of redemption. I can only recommend to folks who don't mind gritty and unsavory characters. This book has multiple characters who all think they are leaving something horrible for something better but it's in direct contrast to this situation. They are self destructive and no one is stopping another from poor decisions. They encourage this behavior.

What you will find in this novel, and in any Denis Johnson work Ive encountered, is a sublime mix of the most lyrical sentences and the most Faulknerian depravity imaginable. This might be Johnsons best. At times I wanted to cry from the shear beauty of the sentences gracefully laced within the storyJamie could feel a liquid warm front moving in on the raw borders of her own disquietand other times I found myself near tears from the senseless, senseless violence. But these are the people Johnson

This was a great first novel and, considering it was published in 1977, it is was a remarkable achievement. The 3 brothers in crime and their misanthropic parents were nicely done and the bleakness factor was very high (especially for 1977). The characters jumped around a bit too much to keep the narrative, but the ill-conceived robbery was tragically comic. The psychotic breakdown of the girl was almost too much to take, but creatively rendered to its logical disgusting end. I was nauseous

deliriously goodHe got up and went to the counter. "One small order of French fries," he told the boy. They were the only customers in the establishment, and so the boy hustled to fill the order, rocketing around in his very own fast food universe, a tiny world half machine and half meat.