Sun Eye Moon Eye centers around Logan Blackfeather, a musician of mixed Hopi descent, whose faulty sense of direction sends him spiraling through the mid-80s. The novel opens with Logan crossing a stretch of Arizona desert, his thumb out for a ride and most of what he owns in a bag slung over a shoulder. By this time he has suffered a breakdown and given up music. A knife fight in the parking lot of a roadside bar ends in the death of a trucker, and in short order Logan finds himself in a psychiatric hospital in New York. He makes his way to Manhattan, where hes as bewildered by the fluorescent-colored spikes of punks as he is by the upturned collars of yuppies. A job as a piano man in a Village bar eases him back into music, and he falls into a turbulent relationship with a successful ad executive. Haunted by a dead father who comes to him in dreams, by the killing of the trucker, and memories of his violent uncle/stepfather, Logan is caught between tradition and modernity, the rural and the urban, his Anglo and Native American ancestries. Myth and dream play key roles in reconstructing Logans worldview, and he begins to suspect that empirical reality is as open to interpretation as the dream world.
Czyz is more than a bit mystical; indeed, he searches for rapture What hes really after, however, is to find mystery within mystery, to have experiences he cannot live without yet cannot pin down.
Paul West, author of The Place in Flowers Where Pollen Rests
Deeply romantic (in the best sense) and darkly evocative, Czyzs lush style explores regions well beyond simple narrative, probing the constantly shifting, oblique connections between failure, memory and the forever-incomplete nature of human desire.
Greg Burkman, The Seattle Times
Genre: Literary Fiction
Czyz is more than a bit mystical; indeed, he searches for rapture What hes really after, however, is to find mystery within mystery, to have experiences he cannot live without yet cannot pin down.
Paul West, author of The Place in Flowers Where Pollen Rests
Deeply romantic (in the best sense) and darkly evocative, Czyzs lush style explores regions well beyond simple narrative, probing the constantly shifting, oblique connections between failure, memory and the forever-incomplete nature of human desire.
Greg Burkman, The Seattle Times
Genre: Literary Fiction
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