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Big Fish

A Novel of Mythic Proportions

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Writer and illustrator Daniel Wallace has published stories in various literary magazines. Big Fish is a novel reminiscent of Garrison Keillor and Mark Twain. It is a surprising work, filled with imagination, homespun humor, and hyperbole. Edward Bloom, an aging salesman, is dying. As his grown son, William, cares for him, the young man tries to focus on what he knows about his father's life. Story after story surfaces in William's memory, and he shares mythic visions of a fantastic father who was loved by all-a man who was the best runner, fisherman, businessman, and adventurer in the world. Big Fish tells these tall tales of Edward Bloom's life. Punctuated with his vast repertory of jokes, they set the stage for Edward's final, wonderful transformation. Each chapter achieves an added richness through Tom Stechschulte's distinctive narration. An interview with Daniel Wallace is the perfect conclusion to this audio production.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      BIG FISH tells the funny and poignant story of Edward Bloom, a legendary figure, seen through the eyes of his son. Tom Stechschulte takes this wonderful story full of myths, tall tales, jokes and yarns, and injects humor, compassion, patience and warmth in all the right places. Stechschulte effortlessly varies his voice for each character, expressing the devotion and awe each holds for Bloom. Most amazingly, the reading makes the entire tale--exaggeration aside--remarkably believable and ultimately too short. A story this enjoyable should be as long as Wallace's imagination is grand. And Stechschulte's delivery of it is impeccable. H.L.S. (c) AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 28, 1998
      "People mess things up, forget and remember all the wrong things. What's left is fiction," writes Wallace in his refreshing, original debut, which ignores the conventional retelling of the events and minutiae of a life and gets right to the poetry of a son's feelings for and memories of his father. William Bloom's father, Edward, is dying. He dies in fact in four different takes, all of which have William and his mother waiting outside a bedroom door as the family doctor tells them it's time to say their goodbyes. He intersperses the four takes with stories (all filtered through William's mind and voice) about the elusive Edward, who spent long periods of time on the road away from home and admitted once to his son that he had yearned to be a great man. The father and son deathbed conversations have son William playing earnest straight man, while his father is full of witticisms and jokes. In a plainspoken style dotted with transcendent passages, Wallace mixes the mundane and the mythical. His chapters have the transformative quality of fable and fairy tale, and the novel's roomy structure allows the mystery and lyricism of the story to coalesce. Agent, Joe Regal; author tour. (Oct.) FYI: Wallace is an illustrator who designs T-shirts, refrigerator magnets and greeting cards.

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  • English

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