Afbeelding auteur

Richard Cox (1) (1970–)

Auteur van The Boys of Summer: A Novel

Voor andere auteurs genaamd Richard Cox, zie de verduidelijkingspagina.

4 Werken 136 Leden 9 Besprekingen

Werken van Richard Cox

The Boys of Summer: A Novel (2016) 49 exemplaren
Goddelijk experiment (2005) 46 exemplaren
Rift (2004) 22 exemplaren
Thomas World (2011) 19 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Pseudoniemen en naamsvarianten
Cox, Richard L.
Geboortedatum
1970-12
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
Odessa, Texas, USA
Prijzen en onderscheidingen
Matt Bialer

Leden

Besprekingen

Hay una chispa divina en el interior de cada uno de nosotros. Pero en un hombre, esa chispa está a punto de explotar. Steve Keeley, un hombre de negocios estadounidense, se precipita desde tres pisos de altura al frío suelo empedrado de Zurich. Días después, un médico le practica una operación quirúrgica milagrosa, y Keeley se da cuenta, al despertar, de que el mundo ha cambiado por completo. A partir de entonces comienza a presentir las cosas antes de que ocurran, y cree ser capaz de realizar proezas claramente imposibles. Este mundo con el que se encuentra es extraño y absorbente, y al mismo tiempo, terriblemente peligroso. Entretanto, en las instalaciones de doce mil millones de dólares ubicadas en una zona marginal del norte de Texas, el súper colisionador yace a más de sesenta metros bajo la superficie de la tierra. Mike McNair, un físico brillante a cargo de un equipo de científicos, trabaja en el descubrimiento de uno de los mayores secretos del universo, una teórica partícula que unifica el universo; llamada la partícula divina. Cuando sus esfuerzos se ven debilitados por el hombre que ha invertido su inmensa fortuna en el proyecto, McNair comienza a sospechar que algo ha debido torcerse en sus investigaciones. Ahora estos dos hombres están a punto de cruzarse sus caminos, de luchar con los misterios de la ciencia y el alma; y de aventurarse en un reino más allá de la razón, de la fe, y puede que también de la vida y de la muerte.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Natt90 | 6 andere besprekingen | Nov 9, 2022 |
Hay una chispa divina en el interior de cada uno de notros. Pero en un hombre, esta chispa está a punto de explotar. Steve Keeley, un hombre de negocios estadounidense, se precipita desde tres pisos de altura al frío suelo empedrado de Zurich. Días después, un médico le practica una operación quirúrgica milagrosa y Keeley se da cuenta, al despertar, de que el mundo ha cambiado por completo. A partir de entonces comienza a presentir las cosas antes de que ocurran, y cree ser capaz de realizar proezas claramente imposibles. Este mundo con el que se encuentra es extraño y absorbente, y al mismo tiempo, terriblemente peligroso. Entretanto, en las instalaciones de doce mil millones de dólares ubicadas en una zona marginal del norte de Texas, el súper colisionador yace a más de sesenta metros bajo la superficie de la tierra. Mike McNair, un físico brillante a cargo de un equipo de científicos, trabaja en el descubrimiento de uno de los mayores secretos del universo.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
TORTOSAGUARDIA | 6 andere besprekingen | Oct 2, 2021 |
This book is catalogued as science fiction/fantasy, but it is far more like many of Stephen Kings books. A group of 3 teenage boys live in Wichita Falls, when a tornado hits. They survive but members of their families don't. Also a kid survives the storm but is in a partial coma for 4 years, when he wakes up he later becomes friends with the other 3 teenagers. The participate in an act of vandalism that forever changes their lives, and finally are forced to confront what they did, or else.
This was an interesting plot, and a well told story. Again if you like King's books, particularly, IT, and his Dark Tower books, you will probably like this.… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
zmagic69 | 1 andere bespreking | Dec 19, 2016 |
SCIENCE FICTION/FANTASY
Richard Cox
The Boys of Summer: A Novel
Night Shade Books
Paperback, 978-1-59780-878-1 (also available as an ebook), 436 pgs., $15.99
September 6, 2016

The tornado that struck Wichita Falls, Texas, on April 10, 1979, serves as the catalyst for this coming-of-age story. The Boys of Summer are Bobby (the jock), Jonathan (the brain), David (as in King), Adam (the born-again), and Todd (the cipher), nine and ten years old when the storm alters the trajectories of all of their lives. Todd is so traumatized by the tornado that he enters a catatonic state. When he surfaces four years later, he possesses a maturity beyond his years, and a creepy knowledge of events that have not happened yet. Twenty-five years later history begins to repeat itself, and the boys, now men, must face the consequences of their actions and account for how they’ve spent their lives.

The Boys of Summer by Richard Cox is difficult to qualify. It is speculative fiction, science fiction, historical fiction, and fantasy, incorporating political, economic, and religious philosophies. It reminds me simultaneously of Stand by Me (1986), The Omen (1976), and The Truman Show (1998). The Boys of Summer deals in free will and predestination, asking whether the individual can rewrite the ending. And maybe the beginning.

Cox’s plot feels labyrinthine, but this is deceptive. It’s really quite simple, unfurling at a steady pace while Cox insidiously doles out puzzle pieces. A subplot involving a Wichita Falls detective whose wife has the same diagnosis as Todd had—catatonic schizophrenia—executes the rare feat of enhancing the main plot. It meshes seamlessly. The story moves back and forth in time from the afternoon of the tornado, to events immediately following Todd’s re-emergence into the world, and the reckoning for those events twenty-five years later. The ominous weather forecasts that begin each section of the novel are an inspired touch. It is possible to go crazy from the heat.

Cox is particularly good at channeling early adolescent angst. “Darth Vader turned out to be Luke’s father, Princess Leia was his sister,” Todd thinks when he awakes, “and the whole world seemed to have lost its mind.” These boys are complex, authentic, and relatable. The lone girl in the group, Alicia, is a well-developed character, but seems to serve merely as a token female. Her significance is unclear. As adults, these characters are less well-defined, with the exception of King David (who “shed his Texas accent and sheath of Middle American fat and his antiquated social conservatism”) who is terribly definite, motivated by the ultimate in insider information.

Wichita Falls itself gets knocked hard by Cox. Riven with class issues, the town is portrayed as a cultural wasteland populated by rednecks and a few wealthy, pseudo-religious hypocrites. On the other hand, his portrait of the ’80s is atmospheric, with its references to the multi-sided dice of Dungeons & Dragons, Atari video games, and Don Henley lyrics. Cox is capable of arresting imagery. During the 1979 tornado, the sky “looked like it had fallen to the earth.” The bleached, white-hot sky of the Wichita Falls summer resembles “overexposed film.”

Cox has created a strange and intriguing mix of elements which, with liberal use of foreshadowing, engenders genuine curiosity and keeps the pages turning. I am flummoxed, but happily so, still at a loss as to what The Boys of Summer is. I do know that it is compelling and a little maddening, and the space-time continuum has been spectacularly compromised.

Originally published in Lone Star Literary Life.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
TexasBookLover | 1 andere bespreking | Sep 12, 2016 |

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Statistieken

Werken
4
Leden
136
Populariteit
#149,926
Waardering
3.2
Besprekingen
9
ISBNs
82
Talen
5

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