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A young man, born and raised in Brooklyn, drifts along with no idea of his future goals. But when his well-to-do parents die in a tragic accident off the cliffs of California''s Big Sur coastline, he finds himself driving west to attend their funeral. On the way, he stays in a small Arizona town called Holbrook. Near his motel he meets a strange woman who runs a small diner and an even stranger man with a special story to tell about his white Mormon parents coming to Navajo country to save the Indians from their supposedly heathen ways. And about how he grew up respecting the way of the Navajo. Confused by his now bi-cultural heritage, he commits an unspeakable crime. His bride-to-be, a Navajo girl, then perishes in a catastrophic flood. Years later, when this strange man convinces our traveler to write the tale into a book, they return to the scene of the flood to better understand his memories and to face the futures they may or may not live to experience.DAVID COPE has authored over thirty non-fiction books, several novels, collections of short stories, children''s books, a large number of poems, and seven plays. His art hangs in many galleries and homes and his orchestral music has been performed worldwide having been recorded on many professional CDs and available online as MP3s. He currently lives in Santa Cruz, California, and Santa Fe, New Mexico, with his wife of nearly fifty years.
An exploration of Cope's experimentation in artificial musical creativity; includes a CD containing performances of music discussed in the text.
In David Cope's strikingly intense new collection, Fragments for the Stars, we see the continued development of a highly original art.
" The poets I named above specialized in this refined experiment, and Pound touched on the subject as did Zukofsky and Bunting, and lesser but inter- esting figures such as Marsden Hartley in his little known poetry , and more romantic writers such as D. Empty Street . 4 Down on the Farm . 9 . 9 . A Circle of Lights .
David Cope's fifth book, "Silences for Love", is framed in elegies, prophet Martin King to old friend Allen Ginsberg, opening with lights fading and flaring over Lake Superior, closing with one leaf in the hidden meadow.
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