Críticas:
"[A] gleeful look at literary affectations." -- Adam Woog - Seattle Times "Tantalizing ... Magnuson nimbly keeps the wheel spinning, neither condemning the whole enterprise of creative writing programs, literary awards and the ambition that drives them, nor fully embracing them. He seems content to simply observe, reflect and entertain." -- Edward Nawotka - Dallas Morning News "Ridiculously entertaining." -- John McMurtrie - SFGate "A fun-filled literary romp." -- Shelf Awareness "[A] plucky caper." -- Texas Monthly "Addictive.... A delightful take on writing programs and American life." -- Alan Cheuse, "All Things Considered" "A triumphantly preposterous fish-out-of-water campus caper." -- Elinor Lipman - The Washington Post "A fast, fun read. Magnuson's writing is strong." -- Publishers Weekly "Jim Magnuson has done something remarkable-written a page-turner about the life of a writer. In his insights into the particular Famous Writer considered here, Magnuson's peerless eye has not missed a single telling detail. His comedy is huge but its also sly: just under the surface of this Portrait of the Almost-Artist as a Cranky Old Man lies a moving meditation on the quest for immortality that drives us all, the mad cry from Othello: "Reputation! Reputation! Reputation!"" -- Anthony Giardina, author of Norumbega Park "This is a droll, understated, ultimately sweet-tempered but also keenly savvy send-up of the much-lamented (and misunderstood) creative writing industry in America. A copy could usefully be included in the welcome kit for all new MFA candidates." -- Richard Ford "James Magnuson's mischievous comedy of novelists and conmen-professional liars both-is as subtle as it is subversive, as clever as it is courageous, as witty as it is touching. Readers will love it-but writers beware!" -- Jim Crace, author of Being Dead "Famous Writers I Have Known is the engaging story of an ingenious con-man who enters the world of Creative Writing with a mixture of innocence, nerve and talent. James Magnuson creates a character both cunning and warmhearted. He describes the Texan landscape with a loving and painterly eye, and he re-creates the world of writers and would-be writers with wit and knowledge and dark laughter." -- Colm Toibin, author of Brooklyn "Mr. Magnuson spins his rambunctious tale with...evident glee." -- Christopher Kelly - New York Times
Reseña del editor:
In this brilliant mix of literary satire and crime caper, Frankie Abandonato, a small-time con man on the run, finds refuge by posing as V. S. Mohle-a famously reclusive writer-and teaching in a prestigious writing program somewhere in Texas. Streetwise and semiliterate, Frankie finds that being treated as a genius agrees with him. The program has been funded by Rex Schoeninger, the world's richest novelist, who is dying. Buzzards are circling, angling for the remains of Rex's fortune, and Frankie quickly realizes that he has been presented with the opportunity of a lifetime. Complicating matters is the fact that Rex is haunted by a twenty-five-year feud with the shadowy Mohle. What rankles Rex is that, while he has written fifty bestsellers and never gotten an ounce of literary respect, Mohle wrote one slender novel, disappeared into the woods, and become an icon. Determined to come to terms with his past, Rex has arranged to bring his rival to Texas, only to find himself facing off against an imposter. Famous Writers I Have Known is not just an unforgettable literary romp but also a surprisingly tender take on two men-one a scam artist frantic to be believed, the other an old lion desperate to be remembered.
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