Wire to Wire

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Product Details

Price
$15.95  $14.83
Publisher
Tin House Books
Publish Date
Pages
375
Dimensions
5.31 X 7.29 X 1.16 inches | 0.92 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781935639053
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author

Scott Sparling grew up near railroad tracks in Southern Michigan and later attended Antioch College. "Wire to Wire" is his first novel. Large portions of it were written in Northern Michigan, Seattle, Portland, and in a tree house near Sucker Lake. He now lives outside Portland, Oregon with his wife and son.

Reviews

"Sparling's debut is well crafted and thrilling, tying together an obvious love for both Michigan and railroads with an expert sense of timing and plot. The world he has created is both overwhelming and exhilarating, thanks in no small part to a large ensemble of memorable characters and a relentless pace. Indeed, hardly a page goes by without some sort of fantastic calamity throwing Slater and company into further turmoil--when the most peaceful passages of the story are speed-addled, that's saying something--but it's done so well that hopping off this runaway train would never cross a reader's mind."
--"Publishers Weekly," Starred Review and Pick of the Week
"A strange, formidable novel about crossed signals and damage done, with plenty of peek-between-your-fingers moments for good measure."
--"Kirkus Reviews"
"Sparling creates compelling, many-faceted characters and a nuanced portrait of a beautiful and tragic place. His writing is self-assured, suffused with a streetwise insouciance, always edgy, and frequently lyrical, particularly on the pleasures of riding the rails to find some kind of peace--or escape."
--"Booklist"
"In this impressive debut, Scott Sparling lends contemporary grunge to the genre as he embraces its trademark obsessions with sex, cash and dead ends. His all-too-human cast of contemporary boxcar drifters, glue sniffers and thugs is drawn in an impressionistic style that makes for stunning emotional depth."
--"Playboy"
"Smart, thrilling, and darkly funny . . . it reads like lightning . . . a muscular cross between Jim Thompson and Cormac McCarthy."
--"The Oregonian"
"[Scott Sparling's] first novel moves along at a gallop, as a gallery of misfits, fuckups, and outright crooks circle around a shady criminal enterprise in the northern tip of Michigan's Lower Peninsula."
--"Portland Mercury"
"Electric . . . it crackles."
--"The Cleveland Plain Dealer"
"An exciting chase through t
Sparling's debut is well crafted and thrilling, tying together an obvious love for both Michigan and railroads with an expert sense of timing and plot. The world he has created is both overwhelming and exhilarating, thanks in no small part to a large ensemble of memorable characters and a relentless pace. Indeed, hardly a page goes by without some sort of fantastic calamity throwing Slater and company into further turmoilwhen the most peaceful passages of the story are speed-addled, that's saying somethingbut it's done so well that hopping off this runaway train would never cross a reader's mind.
"Publishers Weekly," Starred Review and Pick of the Week
A strange, formidable novel about crossed signals and damage done, with plenty of peek-between-your-fingers moments for good measure."
"Kirkus Reviews"
Sparling creates compelling, many-faceted characters and a nuanced portrait of a beautiful and tragic place. His writing is self-assured, suffused with a streetwise insouciance, always edgy, and frequently lyrical, particularly on the pleasures of riding the rails to find some kind of peaceor escape.
"Booklist"
"In this impressive debut, Scott Sparling lends contemporary grunge to the genre as he embraces its trademark obsessions with sex, cash and dead ends. His all-too-human cast of contemporary boxcar drifters, glue sniffers and thugs is drawn in an impressionistic style that makes for stunning emotional depth."
"Playboy"
Smart, thrilling, and darkly funny . . . it reads like lightning . . . a muscular cross between Jim Thompson and Cormac McCarthy.
"The Oregonian"
[Scott Sparling s] first novel moves along at a gallop, as a gallery of misfits, fuckups, and outright crooks circle around a shady criminal enterprise in the northern tip of Michigan s Lower Peninsula.
"Portland Mercury"
Electric . . . it crackles.
"The Cleveland Plain Dealer"
An exciting chase through the mind and through Michigan . . . you don t want to hop off or even go to the club car for a fast drink.
LansingOnlineNews.com
The characters are as complex as the plot and Sparling does a masterful job of tangling them up while keeping the details lucid and telling.
"The Collagist"
"Wire to Wire" ends up being what so many pulp writers think they re making but end up missing: an exploration of the proper aims of existence.
Open Letters Monthly
It s rare to find so many interesting and compelling characters in a single book. "Wire to Wire," the first novel from Portland-based author Scott Sparling, shines.
"Portland Book Review"
"In the tradition of the great noir novels, "Wire to Wire," is really
something. Like being in a stolen car with no brakes in a world of train
hopping, sex, violence, and drugs. It s all edge from start to finish."
Willy Vlautin, author of "The Motel Life"
Scott Sparling writes like a man on fire, and "Wire to Wire" is the wickedly brilliant crime novel forged in the white-hot heat of his talent. It's an electrifying debut by a writer who knows the wrong side of town like the back if his hand. People, if there is a God, this book will win prizes.
Donald Ray Pollock, author of "Knockemstiff" and "The Devil All the Time"
Sparling's spare prose comes with a glint of wit and a persistent quirky intelligence that does two singular things--it completely seduces the reader and convincingly asserts that even the most hapless among us lead rich and complicated lives.
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