

Hero image 0 of Cadillac Orpheus : A Novel (Paperback), 0 of 1
Cadillac Orpheus : A Novel (Paperback)
(No ratings yet)
Key item features
Inspired by Carl Hiaasen and Victor D. LaValle in equal measure, Solon Timothy Woodward mines the nether regions of Florida in search of high drama and raucous comedy. Full of sex, death, and humor, this bawdy, brilliant debut introduces us to three generations of a family in the boisterous, unholy, uncompromising landscape that is the South of today.
Nowhere are the careless vagaries of fate more evident than in a town called Johnsonville on the northern Florida coast, where a family called the Toaks have pushed every possible social boundary to its logical extreme for three generations. Feddy Toak, in his forties, is a medical school dropout, recovering alcohol and cocaine addict, and former handyman. He lives marginally in cheap rental properties owned by his father, Teo, one of Johnsonville's most prosperous bail bondsmen, slumlord, and idol to a diminishing old guard of hustlers and con men who frequent such dives as the He Ain't Here Lounge. Jesmond Toak, Feddy's son, haunted by his father's violent past and current failures, is turning toward the low road.
The entire city seethes with schemes and intrigue and the plot builds as monies are reaped from a black youth falsely arrested for the murder of a white cop, insurance scams involving poor residents stricken with cancer and AIDS, and nefarious land deals involving cemeteries and real-estate scam artists. Suicides and murders, infidelities and violence mount and converge with shattering precision on the eve of a hurricane, forcing the entire community to struggle with its demons -- and search for some chance at redemption.
Chronicling a slice of American landscape and culture with rare levels of depth and originality, Cadillac Orpheus defies categorization: it is by turns exuberant, terrifying, hilarious, brave, brazen, and, above all, wondrous.
Nowhere are the careless vagaries of fate more evident than in a town called Johnsonville on the northern Florida coast, where a family called the Toaks have pushed every possible social boundary to its logical extreme for three generations. Feddy Toak, in his forties, is a medical school dropout, recovering alcohol and cocaine addict, and former handyman. He lives marginally in cheap rental properties owned by his father, Teo, one of Johnsonville's most prosperous bail bondsmen, slumlord, and idol to a diminishing old guard of hustlers and con men who frequent such dives as the He Ain't Here Lounge. Jesmond Toak, Feddy's son, haunted by his father's violent past and current failures, is turning toward the low road.
The entire city seethes with schemes and intrigue and the plot builds as monies are reaped from a black youth falsely arrested for the murder of a white cop, insurance scams involving poor residents stricken with cancer and AIDS, and nefarious land deals involving cemeteries and real-estate scam artists. Suicides and murders, infidelities and violence mount and converge with shattering precision on the eve of a hurricane, forcing the entire community to struggle with its demons -- and search for some chance at redemption.
Chronicling a slice of American landscape and culture with rare levels of depth and originality, Cadillac Orpheus defies categorization: it is by turns exuberant, terrifying, hilarious, brave, brazen, and, above all, wondrous.
Specs
- Book formatPaperback
- Fiction/nonfictionFiction
- GenreLiterature & Fiction
- Publication dateOctober, 2014
- Pages272
- EditionStandard Edition
Current price is USD$17.81
Price when purchased online
- Free shipping
Free 30-day returns
How do you want your item?
Ships to
Arrives by Wed, May 20
|Sold and shipped by thebookpros
4.45746962115797 stars out of 5, based on 4197 seller reviews(4.5)4197 seller reviews
Free 30-day returns
More seller options (2)
Starting from $17.99
About this item
Product details
Inspired by Carl Hiaasen and Victor D. LaValle in equal measure, Solon Timothy Woodward mines the nether regions of Florida in search of high drama and raucous comedy. Full of sex, death, and humor, this bawdy, brilliant debut introduces us to three generations of a family in the boisterous, unholy, uncompromising landscape that is the South of today. Nowhere are the careless vagaries of fate more evident than in a town called Johnsonville on the northern Florida coast, where a family called the Toaks have pushed every possible social boundary to its logical extreme for three generations. Feddy Toak, in his forties, is a medical school dropout, recovering alcohol and cocaine addict, and former handyman. He lives marginally in cheap rental properties owned by his father, Teo, one of Johnsonville's most prosperous bail bondsmen, slumlord, and idol to a diminishing old guard of hustlers and con men who frequent such dives as the He Ain't Here Lounge. Jesmond Toak, Feddy's son, haunted by his father's violent past and current failures, is turning toward the low road. The entire city seethes with schemes and intrigue and the plot builds as monies are reaped from a black youth falsely arrested for the murder of a white cop, insurance scams involving poor residents stricken with cancer and AIDS, and nefarious land deals involving cemeteries and real-estate scam artists. Suicides and murders, infidelities and violence mount and converge with shattering precision on the eve of a hurricane, forcing the entire community to struggle with its demons -- and search for some chance at redemption. Chronicling a slice of American landscape and culture with rare levels of depth and originality, Cadillac Orpheus defies categorization: it is by turns exuberant, terrifying, hilarious, brave, brazen, and, above all, wondrous.
Inspired by Carl Hiaasen and Victor D. LaValle in equal measure, Solon Timothy Woodward mines the nether regions of Florida in search of high drama and raucous comedy. Full of sex, death, and humor, this bawdy, brilliant debut introduces us to three generations of a family in the boisterous, unholy, uncompromising landscape that is the South of today.
Nowhere are the careless vagaries of fate more evident than in a town called Johnsonville on the northern Florida coast, where a family called the Toaks have pushed every possible social boundary to its logical extreme for three generations. Feddy Toak, in his forties, is a medical school dropout, recovering alcohol and cocaine addict, and former handyman. He lives marginally in cheap rental properties owned by his father, Teo, one of Johnsonville's most prosperous bail bondsmen, slumlord, and idol to a diminishing old guard of hustlers and con men who frequent such dives as the He Ain't Here Lounge. Jesmond Toak, Feddy's son, haunted by his father's violent past and current failures, is turning toward the low road.
The entire city seethes with schemes and intrigue and the plot builds as monies are reaped from a black youth falsely arrested for the murder of a white cop, insurance scams involving poor residents stricken with cancer and AIDS, and nefarious land deals involving cemeteries and real-estate scam artists. Suicides and murders, infidelities and violence mount and converge with shattering precision on the eve of a hurricane, forcing the entire community to struggle with its demons -- and search for some chance at redemption.
Chronicling a slice of American landscape and culture with rare levels of depth and originality, Cadillac Orpheus defies categorization: it is by turns exuberant, terrifying, hilarious, brave, brazen, and, above all, wondrous.
Nowhere are the careless vagaries of fate more evident than in a town called Johnsonville on the northern Florida coast, where a family called the Toaks have pushed every possible social boundary to its logical extreme for three generations. Feddy Toak, in his forties, is a medical school dropout, recovering alcohol and cocaine addict, and former handyman. He lives marginally in cheap rental properties owned by his father, Teo, one of Johnsonville's most prosperous bail bondsmen, slumlord, and idol to a diminishing old guard of hustlers and con men who frequent such dives as the He Ain't Here Lounge. Jesmond Toak, Feddy's son, haunted by his father's violent past and current failures, is turning toward the low road.
The entire city seethes with schemes and intrigue and the plot builds as monies are reaped from a black youth falsely arrested for the murder of a white cop, insurance scams involving poor residents stricken with cancer and AIDS, and nefarious land deals involving cemeteries and real-estate scam artists. Suicides and murders, infidelities and violence mount and converge with shattering precision on the eve of a hurricane, forcing the entire community to struggle with its demons -- and search for some chance at redemption.
Chronicling a slice of American landscape and culture with rare levels of depth and originality, Cadillac Orpheus defies categorization: it is by turns exuberant, terrifying, hilarious, brave, brazen, and, above all, wondrous.
info:
We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here, and we have not verified it. Â
Specifications
Book format
Paperback
Fiction/nonfiction
Fiction
Genre
Literature & Fiction
Publication date
October, 2014
Warranty
Warranty information
Please be aware that the warranty terms on items offered for sale by third party Marketplace sellers may differ from those displayed in this section (if any). To confirm warranty terms on an item offered for sale by a third party Marketplace seller, please use the 'Contact seller' feature on the third party Marketplace seller's information page and request the item's warranty terms prior to purchase.
Similar items you might like
Based on what customers bought
Stilicon, trag $14.95
$1495current price $14.95Stilicon, trag
100+ bought since yesterday Remarkably Bright Creatures: A Novel (Paperback) $12.98
100+ bought since yesterday
$1298current price $12.98Remarkably Bright Creatures: A Novel (Paperback)
314.6 out of 5 Stars. 31 reviews50+ bought since yesterday Theo of Golden: A Novel (Paperback) $14.98
50+ bought since yesterday
$1498current price $14.98Theo of Golden: A Novel (Paperback)
904.7 out of 5 Stars. 90 reviewsBest seller Then She Was Gone: A Novel (Paperback) $8.37
Best seller
$837current price $8.37Then She Was Gone: A Novel (Paperback)
964.7 out of 5 Stars. 96 reviewsThe Brothers Karamazov: A Novel in Four Parts and an Epilogue, (Paperback) $14.90 Was $17.00
$1490current price $14.90, Was $17.00$17.00The Brothers Karamazov: A Novel in Four Parts and an Epilogue, (Paperback)
25 out of 5 Stars. 2 reviewsThe Name on the Wall, (Paperback) $10.66
$1066current price $10.66The Name on the Wall, (Paperback)
The Story of the Forest, (Paperback) $16.13
$1613current price $16.13The Story of the Forest, (Paperback)
Un Tal Paul Darringrand, (Paperback) $20.81
$2081current price $20.81Un Tal Paul Darringrand, (Paperback)
The Historian, (Paperback) $4.34
$434current price $4.34The Historian, (Paperback)
4133.6 out of 5 Stars. 413 reviewsIsola: Reese's Book Club: A Novel (Paperback) $14.25
$1425current price $14.25Isola: Reese's Book Club: A Novel (Paperback)
Best seller The Lost Bookshop (Paperback) $5.35
Best seller
$535current price $5.35The Lost Bookshop (Paperback)
304.8 out of 5 Stars. 30 reviewsLa Montaña Mágica, (Paperback) $17.99
$1799current price $17.99La Montaña Mágica, (Paperback)
The Wayfinder: A Novel (Hardcover) $12.48 Was $14.51
$1248current price $12.48, Was $14.51$14.51The Wayfinder: A Novel (Hardcover)
Terry Dactyl, (Paperback) $14.60
$1460current price $14.60Terry Dactyl, (Paperback)
Litterature: Invectives (Paperback) $18.95
$1895current price $18.95Litterature: Invectives (Paperback)
Litterature: Charlot (Paperback) $18.95
$1895current price $18.95Litterature: Charlot (Paperback)
Roadman, (Paperback) $14.99
$1499current price $14.99Roadman, (Paperback)
It Could Have Been Murder, (Paperback) $19.14
$1914current price $19.14It Could Have Been Murder, (Paperback)
Agamemnon, tragedie (Paperback) $15.95
$1595current price $15.95Agamemnon, tragedie (Paperback)
Customer ratings & reviews
0 ratings|0 reviews
This item does not have any reviews yet

