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The River Gods [Paperback]

Brian Kiteley (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 28, 2009
The River Gods is a novel in fragments, a mix of fact and fiction, in which various inhabitants of the area around what is now Northampton, Massachusetts, from the eleventh century through the 1990s, speak of their lives and of the community, a place haunted by the pervasive melancholy of extinguished desire.

Each of the voices--including a character named Brian Kiteley and his family, the original Native American inhabitants, the actor Richard Burton, Sojourner Truth, Richard Nixon, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Jonathan Edwards, and many nameless others--ruminate on a past that is startlingly present and tangible. The main character, though, is the world of Northampton, irrevocably woven into the fabric of Western history, yet still grounded by the everyday concerns of health, money, food, love, and family. It is a novel of voices, the living and the dead, that illuminate the passage of time.




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Editorial Reviews

Review

"In The River Gods, Brian Kiteley masterfully employs his patent narrative method of uncanny subtraction, removing the ligatures of conventional fiction the better to provide a field of implication in which the historical mysteries of America can resonate to maximum effect. In response to the post modern insight that everything is happening at the same time, he brings demonstrable proof of the fact in this luminous, perfectly sculpted novel whose sentences flow as easily through the mind of a nine year old boy in 1960’s America as they do that of an 18th century Puritan divine. The River Gods is one of the most searching portraits of our country I’ve ever read."-- Eli Gottlieb


"Brian Kitely, a writer of great delicacy, perspicacity, and guile, has in The River Gods presented us with a cornucopia of bittersweet vignettes: glimpses of the lives and deaths, the loves and larks and sorrows of a New England town, told outside chronology and inside the vision of several centuries interlaced. The book may have its precedents, but it is in essence strikingly original, and it deserves to become a classic, for all its sophistication a very American one: it tells us who we have been, in a way we never could have guessed."--Harry Mathews

About the Author

Brian Kiteley is Professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of Denver, and the author of Still Life With Insects, I Know Many Songs, But I Cannot Sing, The 3 A.M. Epiphany, and The 4 A.M. Breakthrough.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 176 pages
  • Publisher: Fiction Collective 2; 1 edition (September 28, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1573661511
  • ISBN-13: 978-1573661515
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.6 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #148,659 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Brian Kiteley's third novel The River Gods was published by FC2 and is available as both e-book and paperback. He has also published two novels, Still Life With Insects and I Know Many Songs, But I Cannot Sing, and two collections of fiction exercises, The 3 A.M. Epiphany and The 4 A.M. Breakthrough. He is at work on novel set in Crete in 1988, about love, sun, sex, and the CIA, with cameos by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. Brian Kiteley teaches at the University of Denver in the Creative Writing PhD program. His home page is:

www.du.edu/~bkiteley


 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Unique and subtle, September 8, 2010
By 
Amy Henry (Nipomo, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: The River Gods (Paperback)
Back in 2002, I was in New Orleans for the Super Bowl. We did all the usual touristy things, but I was especially fascinated with Jackson Square in the French Quarter. I spent an afternoon on a bench there, people watching and just absorbing the history of the place. So many events have taken place in that location that I felt like all the other tourists should be paying more attention. It seems like a part of history was still alive even if few people were noticing it. And it was the first place I thought of when Katrina slammed the region: history continuing on, in that uniquely relevant place.


That memory was triggered for me when I read Brian Kiteley's novel, The River Gods. This book takes place in Northampton, Massachusetts, and creates a fictional history of events that occurred over several hundred years in that one location. The rambling river that divides the town also intersects the stories, then and now. The focus of the story is the characters: wildly diverse yet all living within that same region. They range from Puritan settlers to Native Americans, from famous celebrities to an ordinary family called the Kiteleys. The stories are short, and reveal just a snippet of a moment in time. It isn't until later that the impact of the individual stories reveal the comprehensive whole of Northampton history.

In one instance, we are introduced to Abigail Slaughter, one of the Puritan settlers who left England to protect their religious freedoms. She describes the region in 1680: "The land was from the beginning a savage antagonist. We pursued an immediate knowledge of the land to make it ours, but the complexity of this environment often killed or maddened us." That same area, slightly tamed over the passage of a few hundred years, is still mysterious, when, in 1826 Arius Fuller describes an unsolved murder in the same region. Even later, in 1965, a young Brian Kiteley is spying on his grandfather and brother along a verdant river, wondering how he can ever measure up against his agreeable brother.

The idea that one physical place can hold years of history is nothing new. This is why travelers visit the Pyramids or the Great Wall of China. It isn't just the location but the mystery of the unseen people that have lived and breathed at those sites. This is why Kiteley's book is so intriguing. Imagining the heartache, the conflicts, and the joys of different people set against the same backdrop gives it depth, and makes each story, possibly insignificant on its own, have a keener meaning. Because each story is very short, the pace is very quick. Stopping to note the dates on each entry is essential to getting the big picture of how all these stories combine in Northampton. And since they aren't told chronologically, but rather jump back and forth in time, there's a dynamic sense of unity between each character and their place in Northhampton's stream of time.
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10 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Completely beautiful, completely original, September 24, 2009
By 
S. Stone (Berkeley, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The River Gods (Paperback)
If the U.S. designated authors as National Treasures, Brian Kiteley would be a national treasure. Every page of The River Gods is such pure happiness: beautiful, still, compelling, deep.

When you read this novel -- with its short, immaculate, illuminating chapters -- you acquire the sense of perspective on human life that a particularly wry and insightful god might have. The tracing of webs between characters very satisfyingly replaces a more ordinary narrative with something that's not quite like what any other writer in the world does.

Can you tell I'm recommending this book? I am, most definitely.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful & Elegant, December 27, 2009
This review is from: The River Gods (Paperback)
Dude can write. A beautiful creation of first person narrations offering glimpses into the history of a New England town. Each glimpse is like a scent triggering a long-dormant memory. Together, those memories offer a fragmented picture of a majestic life. Once the voices begin to reoccur and the glimpses begin to weave into one another, you can't put it down.
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