Patrick Coleman (2)
Forfatter af The Churchgoer
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Om forfatteren
Image credit: pulled from author's website
Værker af Patrick Coleman
Satte nøgleord på
Almen Viden
- Køn
- male
- Nationalitet
- USA
- Land (til kort)
- USA
- Bopæl
- Ramona, California, USA
- Uddannelse
- MFA from Indiana University
BA from the University of California Irvine - Erhverv
- Assistant Director of the Arthur C. Clarke Center for Human Imagination at UC San Diego
- Agent
- TIM WOJCIK, LEVINE GREENBERG ROSTAN
- Kort biografi
- Patrick Coleman's writing has appeared in Hobart, ZYZZYVA, Zócalo Public Square, the Black Warrior Review, and the Utne Reader, among others. His debut poetry collection, Fire Season (forthcoming from Tupelo Press) won the 2015 Berkshire Prize. Coleman also edited and contributed to The Art of Music, an exhibition catalogue on the relationship between visual arts and music (Yale University Press with the San Diego Museum of Art, October 27, 2015). He earned an MFA from Indiana University and a BA from the University of California Irvine. He lives in Ramona, California and works at the Arthur C. Clarke Center for Human Imagination at UC San Diego.
Medlemmer
Anmeldelser
Statistikker
- Værker
- 3
- Medlemmer
- 70
- Popularitet
- #248,179
- Vurdering
- 3.3
- Anmeldelser
- 13
- ISBN
- 17
The main character, a former pastor named Mark Haines, gradually lost his faith, left his church, and turned against religion. His marriage had failed, he is a recovering addict, and barely holds onto a job as a security guard. His grown daughter has turned against him, and been completely out of his life for years. His daughter won't so much as talk to him, let him see his grandson, nor even share her son's name with him. Perhaps because all these things are going wrong in his life, Haines seems to loose patience with people far too easily, which makes him more unlikable to me.
I also thought the story would have moved along much better if it was shortened appreciably. Before any action Haines would take or any choice he would make, his every thought, consideration and recollection seemed to be needlessly described, adding to the length of the book without adding interest.
And lastly, I thought much of the story itself seemed improbable. Haines has a chance encounter with a teenage girl (Emily) who was planning on hitchhiking from Southern California to Seattle. After this very short meeting with the girl, Mark developed an unusual and unfathomable interest in her. He knew nothing about the girl, including her name or where she lived, yet somehow develops an obsessive interest in finding her again after this single brief encounter.
After another subsequent chance encounter with her, he learns that she just moved out of her "bad" boyfriend's house, and has no place to stay. He allows her to stay at his house, but within a few days, she leaves without a word. Now he's really obsessed with finding her again, supposedly to "make sure she's all right". In the course of trying to find her, he roughs up a young man who he believes might know something of her whereabouts, but doesn't learn much. Then, by chance, Haines runs into a still-active minister from his old church, another guy that Mark doesn't like. But it happens that this former acquaintance of his just happened to know something about another former church member, named Sammy, who previously worked with Mark when he was still a church minister. As it ends up, Sammy just happens to be the name of the "bad" ex-boyfriend of Emily, the girl Mark is searching for. Haines suspects that the this Sammy must be the same Sammy that was Emily's old boyfriend. Haines finds out where Sammy lives, only to find that he's into drugs and porn. Police just happen to raid Sammy's house while Haines is visiting, and he gets himself arrested during the raid. After Mark is released by the police without being charged, he still can't find the girl. But Haines guesses that he knows where Emily may have been a church member before she became a runaway. Still not knowing for sure who he's asking about, Haines visits the girl's old church, pretending to be a police officer. He learns a little more about a runaway girl matching Emily's description, and he then breaks into that church minister's house to get even more information. It ends up that Emily and the minister's daughter were in a lesbian relationship, ending when the minister found out. Haines then he breaks into the minister's house, and roughs him up because Haines feels the minister should have helped the girl more. All too far fetched to me, and didn't really keep me interested.… (mere)