
Leaving Las Vegas
John O'Brien
(Author)Description
A testimony to the raw talent of its young author, Leaving Las Vegas is a compelling story of unconditional love between two disenfranchised and lost souls--an overlooked American classic.
Product Details
Publisher | Grove Press |
Publish Date | March 14, 2017 |
Pages | 192 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780802125934 |
Dimensions | 8.2 X 5.4 X 0.7 inches | 0.5 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"A brutal and unflinching portrait of the low life in the city of high rollers, Leaving Las Vegas is both shocking and curiously exhilarating. John O'Brien was a stunningly talented writer who created poetry from the most squalid materials. This is a beautiful and horrifying novel."--Jay McInerney
"There is not a false note in the novel . . . O'Brien has a strong tradition behind him here, that of American naturalism, and he fits into it well. From Stephen Crane to Hubert Selby, Jr. . . . [O'Brien] achieves real power in his writing. You seldom encounter it anymore, but when you do you know you've been properly whacked by a real talent."--New York Daily News
"Here is that rarest jewel, a really fine novel. It's a magical piece of work, one of the best I've seen in a long time. John O'Brien has a very great talent."--Larry Brown
"This book is not only dark and dire, it is crushing. How can a novel so absolutely devoid of hope be so gripping? The portrait of Sera and Ben is a tour de force--masterful and relentless. Leaving Las Vegas is the strongest and most extreme look at alcohol I've ever read. This book moved and bothered me and weeks later it is still in my mind. I think O'Brien is simply terrific."--Ron Carlson
"[An] immense writing talent . . . John O'Brien's life ended with a gunshot. Leaving Las Vegas, for its intensity, its bravado, and its legacy--an American tragedy that would pave the way for many more--only begins to understand why."--Esquire
"An oddly romantic, bender-to-oblivion book."--Entertainment Weekly
"The novel imbues its main characters with something the movie can only hint at: an acute awareness of the extreme--and chosen--circumstance of their lives. The book's unique power resides in this awareness; and it allows O'Brien to breathe new life into two of the most familiar and overused archetypes of popular fiction: the drunk and the whore . . . Ben's impulse to destroy himself is so psychologically unspecific as to be sublime."--Boston Review
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