With a resonant sense of the period and culture, Douglas Bauer evokes the freewheeling feel of the old Southwest in the early part of the twentieth century and delivers an allusive commentary on the charlatans of our own era.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
This guy can write!,
This review is from: The Very Air: A Novel (Paperback)
One of the best books I've ever read, and I've read billions. The prose just sings. I was here buying his other two novels and happened to see that the average customer review for "Air" was only two stars. Well, don't listen to them! This writer has an exquisite gift with words that is rarer than hen's teeth (I obviously don't have the gift, but like Solieri, I sure recognize it when I see it.) Buy this book!
0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Nice Try,
By James Hercules Sutton (Des Moines, IA (USA)) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Very Air: A Novel (Paperback)
Good premise; snake oil salesmen are fun. But writing shows inexperience, and asides from author to reader are gauche and jejune. Ending seems unmotivated: why return to a radio station in flames? Fictionalizing of historical fact is well done, but invention would have been better. Female lead character is precious. Oddly, characters are most believable when bizarre, as if author finds it difficult to deal with what's normal. Worth reading author's next novel; this one a transition piece, because labored and flawed.
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