Críticas:
'A profound, disturbing and important book' Washington Post; 'They Whisper, Butler's first novel since his Pulitzer prize-winning A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain, is nothing less than a meditation on the spiritual nature of sexuality - its mystical power and its deep connection to death. In this, it is closer to the spirit of Blake than to that of Joyce, though its style is deliberately Joycean. Like all fundamentalists, Ira allows no other god. His incantations have the thythmic repetition of long prayers... And Ira, while singing out his joy in sexual encounters with the prostitutes of Vietnam, or in his erotic tableaux of actual and imagined lovers, embodies that notion of the ecstatic. Real life slips away when Ira contemplates his goddess, who - whatever her shape, race or age - is always Aphrodite' Washington Post
Reseña del editor:
As Ira Butler moves into middle-age, he is driven to examine his sexuality and its obsessive hold on him. Reliving moments of intimacy with his past lovers, they become so real to him once more that he sometimes finds himself speaking through them, creating a narrative of sensuality and eroticism.
"Sobre este título" puede pertenecer a otra edición de este libro.