I will start off with a quote which wonderfully illustrates Chester's masterful prose:
"The city offered distractions, glorious dreams. one could descend from the unreality of an office to the unreality of a street and thence to the unreality of a night club, a theatre; a public meeting, a music hall, a religious activity, a library, a brothel, a circus, a gambling casino, a street filled with whores and whoresses, a picture gallery, a queer bar, a lunar park, or most frequently the rectangular darkness of the national church with its two-dimensional gods in technicolor. Those who had been unable to encounter themselves throughout the day thronged these places at night that they might escape themselves a while." -Behold Goliath, Entertainment
Two fables - The victory was my favourite story since Chester creates an apocalyptic future where the war has been raging so long that children around 8-6 are being drafted and end up invading their own country, desperate to find the government to overthrow in the desolated, bombed remains of their own street.
One cannot write a review about Chester without appreciating how true to himself he is, living as a gay man in times where this was not widely accepted:
"We exchange funny stories from our adventures. He becomes annoyed that I am talking too loud, that I say "him" when I mean "him" and not, as he says, "a person" or some other euphemism. "If you don take care when you talk I will go home." Outraged at being made to feel vulgar, uncouth, I bellow: "I wasn't taught my manners by your Madison Avenue closet queens." -Ismael
And here's one last quote that will hopefully make you go and find a copy or archived version of this book right away:
"Although the room faced north, the air was amber as if once by chance sunlight had stumbled in, been reluctant to leave, and so remained, growing pale, growing dry, hanging to the walls and to the enormous chandelier whose crystals rang at the breath of our entry." -The head of a sad angel