“Michael Bible may have hit what a lot of us were trying, a singular new voice for CEOs to slackers. He’s so open, so easy, so fluid, you’ll smile with joy turning every page.”—Barry Hannah
A prequel to Michael Bible’s Sophia, Gaucho feature a young Maloney and his adoptive father, Frank, who often get into trouble together in their small Carolina town—partly due to Maloney’s expansive heart.
Decent coming of age novella about a teenage boy in North Carolina. I enjoyed the writing style, but wasn't as caught up in the visions/dream world that the main character periodically inserts into the narrative.
This was a nice coming of age tale that was, all in all, fine. I did not find myself getting carried away in the story as much as I would have liked. Maybe it was the writing style? Honestly the fantasy snippets could have bank removed and I don't think it would make much of a difference in my reading experience. It has all the pieces of the puzzle (interesting plot, well thought out characters, descriptive writing, etc), I just couldn't make them fit. I definitely think it's worth a read, I just wouldn't go in with crazy high hopes.
I don’t know, man, this thing’s pretty perfect. Devoted to the gut feeling of knowing you’re living the beginning of an ending and just LIVING. And dying. And being a water molecule existing in its endless cycle of a teensy-tiny part of the universe that’s also going through its own endless cycles. A small, devastating story that encompasses literally all of everything. Just amazing.
It’s alright, but it’s definitely not good. Feels like it was written by an undergraduate student who “likes to read.” Undoubtedly, it was published to satisfy a contract.
I wish I could have liked this more, as the characters and prose were both delightful and inviting, but the predictability of the action slowed my reading down, making this tiny book a bit of a slog to get through at the end.
Maybe a bit less developed than the True Delight Sophia, but still a slight, feet-three-inches-off-the-ground work of considerable fun and magnitude. Michael Bible is your Natural Poet Friend.