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Magnetic Field(s)
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Magnetic Field(s) | Paperback

by Ron Loewinsohn (Author)

List Price: $13.50  
Available:  Usually ships in 24 hours

Binding:  Paperback
Publisher:  Dalkey Archive Press
Edition:  1st Edition
Page Count:  181 Pages
Publication Date:  November 10, 2002
Sales Rank:  662,979nd


EDITORIAL REVIEWS


Product Description
Organised around the idea that "you can't know what a magnetic field is like unless you're inside of it," Ron Loewinsohn's first novel opens from the disturbing perspective of a burglar in the midst of a robbery, and travels through the thoughts and experiences (both real and imaginary) of a group of characters whose lives are connected both coincidentally and intimately. All of the characters have a common desire to imagine and invent rather horrifying stories about the lives of people around them. As the novel develops, certain phrasings and images recur improbably, drawing the reader into a subtle linguistic game that calls into question the nature of authorship, the ways we inhabit and invade each other's lives, and the shape of fiction itself.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 4 reviews)

One Book To Save by Jane Trucksis (New Orleans LA) 5 Stars
April 17, 2008
Recently there was a project called "The Big Read" at the library, and it posed a question inspired by the Ray Bradbury novel "Fahrenheit 451": if you had to save one book from oblivion, what would it be? I chose Ron Loewinsohn's "Magnetic Field(s)." This novel is structured like a symphony, in 3 movements. As the stories unfold, they interweave, just as a theme will reappear throughout a piece of music. This is just one of the beauties of this novel. The language is simple and clear, yet poetic and evocative. The characters are richly developed, and you really get into their heads, feeling their anxiety as if it was your own. The images that Loewinsohn creates will stay with you, hauntingly. I've always had recurring dreams of apartments I've lived in, and after reading "Magnetic Field(s)" I have an idea why. The spaces we live in, visit, imagine, all become a part of us, and determine much about our character. You will never forget this marvelous novel.

the best book i've read... by Kailyn A. Hasbrouck (santa cruz) 5 Stars
May 07, 2005
I try not to go into titannic size book stores anymore. but i did a year or so ago...my eyes were flirting with the spines and covers, some with familiar names, some unknown. i usually pick something up that looks interesting...but magnetic fields picked me. it was on the bottom shelf to the left. and i thought to myself "you have to read this book". And i did. Magnetic Fields is the craft at its best. As well as throwing boomerangs around what people think creative writing is.

Beautiful and hypnotic by Keith E Stetson (Warrington, PA United States) 5 Stars
August 21, 2003
skreetkleener is 100% correct and I couldn't describe this book any better. It's the best I've read in the past year and one of my favorites of all time. Experimental, but not pompously so. It's both enjoyable and intellectual.

Experiencing Space(s) by wordtron (New York, NY USA) 5 Stars
March 27, 2003
In a recent interview, Loewinsohn explains that he wrote the novel in basically six weeks(!), but when I think about how I read this amazing, enthralling, mysterious novel in practically one fevered gulp, I'm not surprised. I can't wait to read it again. Divided into three sections, MF begins with a burglar's experiences of being in the homes (spaces) of complete strangers and what he imagines their lives are like. The second section is from the perspective of the owner of the last house the burglar is breaking into. They briefly interact, in a very odd and funny scene. The second character turns out to be a sort of "sound artist" who takes his family to spend the summer on the Hudson in a sublet. There, while working on a sound sculpture called "Magnetic Field," he begins to think about the family that lived in the house he's subletting. In the final section, he finds out that his collaborator on MF has been having an affair, and he's shocked that he'd had no idea, and begins imagining how the affair had developed. All along, there are phrases that repeat though in entirely different contexts. Very unsettling yet hypnotic. This truly felt like more than just a book in my hands, but a wholly successful work of art that in addressing the idea of space, whether physical or personal, and how we experience it, completely altered my own experience of space. It was like taking a drug. Which maybe is why I can't wait to re-read it.

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