Fall Out of Heaven is unlike any other book I have read, particularly in its device of alternating the stories of a father with that of the son, one chapter after the other.
Author Alan Cheuse uses it effectively, I think, to tell his father's written-down story of growing up a Russian Jew / Bolshevik fighter pilot (the sort of thing one could not make up) and his own story of growing up in an immigrant family in northern New Jersey with a father dealt a hand of twists, turns, and disappointments.
Throw in a third generation--Cheuse's son--accompanying him on a journey to central Asian ground trod upon by the old adventure-seeking (and, frankly, heroic) fighter pilot, and you've got an exploration of family, anti-Semitism, history, culture, introspection, and What's it All About?
Quirky. Creative. Insightful.
I liked it.