Moving from the Great Lakes to the jazz bars of Detroit and Chicago, Of Song and Water is a tale of singlehanded sailors and jazz musicians, of working-class dreams blighted by family duty, personal betrayals, and the untold violence between fathers and sons. The novel follows the life of Coleman Moore, a jazz guitarist of early fame who finds himself adrift and in the company of ghosts: his mentor, a black jazz legend trying to live peacefully on the edge of a white town; his grandfather, a Prohibition rumrunner turned ruthless entrepreneur; and his first love, a clear-headed woman who refuses to live in the dark tunnels of the past. As he abandons music and turns his mind to a damaged sailboat, Coleman begins a hazardous course, risking the love of his daughter and the trust of Brian James, his longtime collaborator and friend. Driven by mid-life doubts, Coleman revisits his early ambitions and desires, returning through a maze of time and memory to the central crisis of his life, a moment of tremendous cruelty that calls into question much of what he hopes for and believes. In language that evokes the riffs and rhythms of jazz and the sound and movement of the Great Lakes, Joseph Coulson’s second novel is a profound Orphic journey, a story of hidden truths, unfulfilled dreams, and possible redemption.
Joseph Coulson Livres
L'écriture de Joseph Coulson se distingue par son lyrisme et son mélange perspicace d'histoire américaine et de critique sociale. À travers ses romans, il relate la vie des gens de la classe ouvrière, offrant aux lecteurs une perspective captivante et pénétrante sur la société. Sa prose et son étendue historique ont été comparées à de grands noms de la littérature, soulignant sa voix distinctive. Le travail de Coulson s'étend également à la poésie et au théâtre, démontrant un talent littéraire polyvalent qui explore de profondes expériences humaines.


The Vanishing Moon
- 360pages
- 13 heures de lecture
Set against the backdrop of five tumultuous decades, this novel explores the trials of a working-class family from the Great Depression through the Vietnam War. Through the eyes of Stephen Tollman, readers witness his childhood adventures with his brother Philip, as they protect their younger siblings from financial despair. The narrative deepens with the arrival of Katherine Lennox, captivating both brothers, and later shifts to Philip's son James, who grapples with his father's anger during a time of social upheaval in the 1960s.