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Part fantasy, part fabulism, part detective, award-winning author
Chuck Rosenthal creates an alternative future for humankind and the
universe.
In 1964, Chuck Rosenthal was a thirteen year old boy whose dream
was to make his grade school basketball team. "Never Let Me Go
"tells the true story of how a college professor who coached grade
school basketball as a hobby became the man who held that dream in
his hands; became Rosenthal's coach and his mentor; how he made
Rosenthal his student, his confidant, and eventually his sexual
partner, and how that teenager, trapped in the cycle of loyalty,
betrayal, denial, secrecy and abuse, found the inner resources to
escape and take the first steps toward adulthood.
With patience, persistence and love, a man called Bird befriends
Annie, an abused and difficult mare. Eventually, Annie reciprocates
Bird's affection, but their relationship is sorely tested when they
are separated by a catastrophic wildfire. In order to reunite, they
must battle not only the forces of nature but the greed and cunning
of unscrupulous men.
Literary Nonfiction. Travel Writing. WEST OF EDEN: A LIFE IN 21ST
CENTURY LOS ANGELES is a bitingly funny riff on Hollywood, Malibu,
Topanga Canyon, and LA. David St. John calls it "hands-down one of
the funniest--and wisest--works about Los Angeles." Rosenthal
skewers Scientologists, movie stars, celebrities, and himself.
Evelyn McDonnell calls it "dry, absurd, and beautiful." Celeste
Fremon: "Dead eye gossipy and wildly funny." Rosenthal's second
book of Magic Journalism, like ARE WE NOT THERE YET?, is
philosophical and hilarious.
Poetry. Art. Sci-fi Studies. TOMORROW YOU'LL BE ONE OF US is a
collection of poems composed entirely of dialogue from sci-fi
movies of the 50s and early 60s, each poem accompanied by an apt
and witty illustration. Succinct, resonant, hilarious, and
space-age, this is a book that celebrates an era of filmmaking and
at the same time creates something entirely new.
An anthology of undergraduate poetry, fiction, and photography by
the students of Loyola Marymount University.
For a hundred years, the Mars novels of Edgar Rice Burroughs
offered readers their first glimpse of life on the red planet.
Now join Captain Carter on his maiden voyage to Mars in what is a
fully annotated edition of the classic "A Princess of Mars," with
extensive notes prepared by noted Burroughs scholar Aaron Parrett.
And thrill to all-new adventures written in tribute to the novel by
Matthew Stover ("Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith," "Caine's Law"),
Daniel Keys Moran ("The A.I. War"), Chuck Rosenthal ("The Heart of
Mars") and more
"A Friend in Thark" by Matthew Stover A "lost chapter" of A
Princess of Mars about a friendship that will become legendary
throughout Mars.
"Uncle Jack" by Daniel Keys Moran A dying man on Mars receives a
guest of the most unlikely sort.
"The Whites Apes of Iss" by Mark D'Anna The untold story of the
keeper of the atmosphere factory, and his fateful encounter with a
mysterious visitor.
"Gentleman of Virginia" by Michael Kogge A young Southerner's
obsession with Mars leads him to volunteer for the Confederate
Army.
"Zero Mars" by Aaron Parrett Daring young Maizy Theta risks her
freedom on Mars to save the life of Hypatia, a promising
mathematician on Earth.
"An Island in the Moon" by Chuck Rosenthal The greatest warlord of
Mars returns home and discovers it has changed dramatically from
the red planet he knew.
With a specially-prepared bibliography of Burroughs resources.
"This book is not affiliated with, nor has been licensed,
approved, or authorized by any entity of the Edgar Rice Burroughs
estate or Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc."
Literary Nonfiction. Travel Writing. South Asia Studies.
"Irreverent is a good word to describe this chronicle of a
four-month sojourn in North India and the Himalayas undertaken by a
group of California college students, teacher and novelist
Rosenthal, his poet wife, and their daughter. But it merely hints
at the many dimensions of Rosenthal's roguish and frank travelogue,
what with its thorny detail, skepticism, and chutzpah; complex
philosophical, political, and spiritual conundrums; acid humor,
mystical chaos, and cosmic surrealism. It helps that Rosenthal,
hailed everywhere they go as 'Cowboy' thanks to his feathered hat,
has been immersed in Buddhism for several decades, enabling him to
extract lessons in the nature of illusion from every ludicrous,
alarming, or gratifying episode within the cacophony and crush of
Kolkata, the breathtaking beauty of Bhutan, the impossibilities of
Sikkum, and the labyrinthine surprises of Kathmandu. Rosenthal
vividly recounts time-warping complications, extreme discomfort and
illness, suffocating train rides, terrifying maneuvers on crumbling
mountain roads, the ferment of immense markets, bloody border
conflicts, terrorism, spontaneous friendship, and glorious vistas.
As he shares his affecting adventures swimming in the Ganges and
visiting temples, monasteries, and a zoo without animals, Rosenthal
contemplates epic suffering and transcendent beauty in a wry and
transporting tale of both earthly and metaphysical journeys"--Donna
Seaman, Booklist.
Part fantasy, part fabulism, and part detective novel, this
alternative future for humankind and the universe is presented by
an award-winning author.
Newly restored to the author's original version and for the first
time in softcover, Loop's End complete's Chuck Rosenthal's
magnificent Loop Trilogy. Here is the final book in the hilarious
and often moving saga of the slightly bent working-classs American
family, the Loops.
Restored to the author's original version, Loop's Progress is the
first of The Loop Trilogy. An uproarious novel about coming-of-age
that reflects the gritty reality of modern urban America.
Restored to the author's original version, Experiments in Life and
Deaf is the second book in The Loop Trilogy. It's a brilliant,
hyper-real vision of coming of age in working-class America.
Not far in the future, catastrophic weather events have crippled
the technological infrastructure of the world and humankind is on
the verge of total annihilation. One man knows the secret and only
one young woman can save the planet. From Chuck Rosenthal comes an
apocalyptic vision of the future in My Mistress, Humanity.
Fiction. Son of a Mexican Creole soldier and a Comanche shaman,
Coyote O'Donohughe learns shape-shifting from his mother and turns
the tide of history in the Mexican Revolution, at the Alamo, the
Battle of San Jacinto, and the Comanche wars against Texas Rangers.
You don't know how much the history books got wrong and how funny
all that stuff really was.
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