Under The Sea

Author: Mark Leidner

Stock information

General Fields

  • : 33.00 NZD
  • : 9780991360888
  • : Tyrant Books
  • : Tyrant Books
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  • : 0.35
  • : July 2018
  • : .67 Inches X 5.61 Inches X 8.22 Inches
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  • : books

Special Fields

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  • : Mark Leidner
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  • : Paperback
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  • : English
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  • : 256
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Barcode 9780991360888
9780991360888

Local Description

Review: "Equal parts hilarity and horror... virtuosic."--New York Times
"Poetic and extraordinarily strange"--Buzzfeed
"From the mean streets to the moon, the maze of an ant colony to the maze of elementary school memory, Leidner's adroitness at showing us who we are, as well as all the wrong mirrors we've gazed into, is nothing short of miraculous." Kristen Iskandrian, author of Motherest--Kristen Iskandrian
"In a literary world of fictional same old same old, Mark Leidner is a real deal original. In Under the Sea, Leidner leads us through a world of stolen drugs, weird tales about characters named Tzara-9, modern sickness, break-ups and anti-break-ups. There's only one thing you can say about a writer like this: He's a total bad ass." - Scott McClanahan, author of The Sarah Book--Scott McClanahan

Description

A collection of stories that focus on love, lost love, death, the absurdity of the human condition, relationships, and beauty. There is also a story about insects that is more human than most D.H. Lawrence. Mark Leidner's fiction is deeply infused with poetry, but never turns purple. "Let's see how merciful you really are," she mutters to God, then with shaky hands she points the gun at her own chest and pulls the trigger. The blast spins her around twice and she falls limp crossways over the soldier, gushing blood all over his body from a hole over her heart. The impact of her fall, however, wakes the man from his unconscious slumber. He sees her face tilted just above his. He looks up into her eyes. Her eyes grow wide. She's ecstatic that he's alive, but horrified that she's about to die. He tries to mouth something, but he can't because she's crushing his lungs. She tries to roll off of him, but she's lost so much blood that she's too weak to roll very far, and she only rolls a few inches. The wound on her heart is bleeding onto his face. He's blinking and choking on her blood while despairing, not at his own pain, but at how awfully she has been hurt. "We should have just broken up," the man finally manages to say, coughing and spitting between gulps of blood. "I know," says the woman. Mark Leidner is a poet. He also writes fiction and screenplays. He lives in Oregon.