Million Heavens
By (Author) John Brandon
McSweeney's Publishing
McSweeney's Publishing
16th July 2013
United States
General
Fiction
FIC
Paperback
272
Width 152mm, Height 216mm, Spine 13mm
363g
A comatose piano prodigy is attended by his gruff father, a motley vigil of devotees, a disconsolate wolf and a would-be angel who determinedly writes songs that could free him. Reprint.
"Wondrous More than once I handed A Million Heavens to a friend and watched the rhythms compel him or her into the thickness of a paragraph, then onto the next page. I had to stop reading to actually pace, marveling at what one writer can imagine, what a novel is capable of holding."
Charles Bock, New York Times Book Review
John Brandon's novels are choral compositions in the voice of marginal AmericansMr. Brandon channels many influences while always sounding like himself. At his best, which he's at with some frequency here, he writes in a crackling way about small hopes and larger despair. He gravitates to the kind of regional misfits who drew Flannery O'Connor's eye, and his dialogue is snappy and eccentric, like a combination of two masters of the craft, Elmore Leonard and Charles Portis. [His] strengths assured prose, well-timed wisecracks and a convincing crew of pilgrims just waiting for directions are quickly becoming Mr. Brandon's trademarks."
The New York Times
"A surreal exploration of the origin of inspiration, of what connects humans to each other and to their surroundings. ...Brandon's gift for conjuring a powerful sense of place has never been stronger as the high-desert sands invade every nook and cranny of the lives of his characters."
Booklist
Brandon deftly orients his readers to the level of his characters by perfectly evoking the everyday emotions, urges, and annoyances that are relatable despite the uncommon situations they are born of."
ZYZZYVA
"'A Million Heavens, ' a book that practically shouts from the rooftops its refusal to put on airs, its desire to strip down the prose and get out of its own way. Brandon's unadorned style and disdain for anything fancy' belie what a good (and sometimes fancy) writer he is, as well as how much he loves playing with the reader's expectations, interrupting and upending traditional elements of the novel even as he claims to want to be the deliverer rather than the composer."
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
"A surreal exploration of the origin of inspiration, of what connects humans to each other and to their surroundings. ...Brandon's gift for conjuring a powerful sense of place has never been stronger as the high-desert sands invade every nook and cranny of the lives of his characters."
Booklist
"[John Brandon] deftly renders a desert wilderness where human hearts are compelled to seek isolation from the pains of the world, but tend to find connectedness despite themselves."
Publishers Weekly
A theologically engaged book, salted with hope, as well as blistering insight."
The Plain Dealer
Something of a genre-buster: in alternating beats a bittersweet comedy about the law of inertia and a plaintive serial-killer thriller on the laws of the wild. The crisscrossing roads of A Million Heavens bustle with luminous prose that carries only good news for lovers of original fiction."
The Boston Globe
The brilliant thing about A Million Heavens is the way it juggles humanity, wilderness, and a new element for Brandonthe supernatural."
The Portland Mercury
Leaves one swift note of humanness ringing in your ears, reminding you that people overcome things, subtly or powerfully, and in the end that it is all right to have questions."
The Oxford American
John Brandon was raised on the Gulf Coast of Florida. His favorite recreational activity is watching college football. This is his third novel.