Seeing Crows

by Matthew Miles
Seeing Crows Book Image
  • Binding: Kindle Edition
  • ISBN:
  • Pub. Date: 2008-12-24
  • Amazon Sales Rank: 52986
  • Amazon Customer Rating: Avg. Customer Rating for 'Seeing Crows is ' out of 5
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Detailed Personal Development Book Information

  • Title:

    Seeing Crows

  • Reading Level: Kindle Edition
  • Binding: Kindle Edition
  • No. of Pages: 279
  • Language:
  • Publisher:
  • Pub. Date: 2008-12-24
  • ISBN:
  • Product Size (W x H x L) inches: 0 x 0 x 0
  • Shipping Weight: 0
  • Average Customer Review: Customer Rating for 'Seeing Crows ' is  out of 5 See Customer Reviews
  • Amazon Sales Rank: 52986

Seeing Crows Review

Source: Product Description
Suffocating in the rural ditches of upstate New York, a troubled drop-out struggles to deal with the sudden death of his best friend, a crumbling relationship to the woman he lives with and the secrets that tie them all together.
An ex-con takes him under his wing where they work the night shift together at a coffin factory and they embark on a series of increasingly criminal endeavors fueled by booze and drugs.
Propelled by his desire for a girl working in the factory office, he launches down a reckless path that divides good intentions from bad, pursuing gratification, and eventually self-preservation, over friendship or honesty.
As the consequences of his apathy catch up to him, he scrambles to keep out of the tide of trouble, even while friendship becomes harder to recognize, or prove, and the truth harder to speak, or hide.
Darkly humorous, Seeing Crows recounts the criminal conversion of a young man, pathologically indifferent and oppressed by economic and cultural isolation. A story about moral complexity, and complicity, amongst people who do not even begin to think in those terms, Seeing Crows explores the fleeting nature of friendship and honesty in a world not much concerned with the fortune of a delinquent at the bottom of the food chain.
If Harry Crews' Feast of Snakes and John Barth's The End of the Road had a discarded bastard child raised by Russell Banks' Rule of the Bone, it would probably look like Seeing Crows.

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Number of reviews: Average Rating: Avg. Customer Rating for 'Seeing Crows' is  out of 5

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