Lullaby for the Rain Girl
Christopher Conlon
Rated: 4.00 of 5 stars
4.00
· 2 ratings · 346 pages · Published: 23 May 2012
"We could call this book a 'contemporary metaphysical mystery' or a 'modern fantasy, ' but it's far more...Lullaby for the Rain Girl resonates like the Expat Paris of Hemingway in A Moveable Feast and the 1960s College Crazy of Richard Farina's Been Down So Long Looks Like Up To Me: detailed recall of 'what was' interwoven with 'what should have been.' There's a rough 20th century romanticism, too, something like Richard Matheson's sensibility filtered through Henry Miller's libidinous viewpoint. It gives us the hauntings of not-quite-ghosts, lingering regrets and remembrances, and the documentation of the results of not so wise but always human choices. It is one hell of a story told by one hell of a writer, a novel that feels more evocatively true than many memoirs." - Mort Castle, author of Moon on the Water and The Strangers
"This powerful novel is both innovative and a fine example of world-class storytelling: it's about life and the restless shadows it casts; it's about death and ghosts who aren't ghosts. Gripping, nuanced, and deep, Conlon's novel delivers." - John Shirley, author of Bleak History and In Extremis
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- horror 3
- dark 3
- teens 3
- suspense 3
- philosophical 2
- paranormal 2
- mystery 2
- drama 2
- ghosts 1
- supernatural 1
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