Le nouveau roman de l'auteur de La conspiration des ténèbres.
Daniel Silverman, romancier dont le dernier succès remonte à près de vingt ans, reçoit une invitation à faire une conférence, émanant du collège évangélique d'une petite ville perdue du Minnesota.
Lorsqu'il arrive à destination, il découvre que les membres du collège en question sont des fondamentalistes chrétiens, dont le mode de vie et la vision du monde sont plutôt déroutants. Quel intérêt ont-ils alors à inviter un écrivain comme Daniel Silverman, juif athée et homosexuel, autrement dit l'incarnation quasi parfaite de l'Antéchrist ?
Alors que le blizzard se déchaîne, Daniel va aller de surprise en surprise et vivre un véritable cauchemar.
On retrouve ici le ton inimitable et l'intelligence proprement diabolique de l'auteur de La Conspiration des ténèbres qui, après le cinéma, s'attaque à la fracture religieuse et morale dont souffrent les États-Unis, pour nous livrer un roman aussi palpitant qu'effrayant.
Theodore Roszak was Professor Emeritus of history at California State University, East Bay. He is best known for his 1969 text, The Making of a Counter Culture.
Roszak first came to public prominence in 1969, with the publication of his The Making of a Counter Culture[5] which chronicled and gave explanation to the European and North American counterculture of the 1960s. He is generally credited with the first use of the term "counterculture".
There were parts of this book that I really like, such as the essential plot line. The main character was a little hard to read sometimes because he's one of those literati that even literati can't always stand. However, I thought the book was poignant: it's comical yet terrifying. It's well written and has strong imagery. I even like the discussion of some of the stories the main character (a writer) has written--I'd read them!
Got this book as a random book that caught my eye at the library. It is a story about Daniel Silverman a washed up author that is hanging on by a thread he gets an offer he can't refuse a 45 minute lecture for $12K in a religious college. Daniel can't turn this down even though he is from San Francisco, is gay, and Jewish. But money is too good so he goes and is snowed in with these people who hate him.
Theodore takes the social issues of the day homosexuality, women's rights, and Israel. He points out the right's hypocrisy. He tries to be neutral about the issues and lets the two sides talk it out.
This book is essentially a long and humorous argument about theology. Definetely worth the read for the opposing viewpoints alone. The one thing I could say that detracted from it was its exageration that tended to make it a little bit unbelievable. Are there really people out there this hardcore in their beliefs??