Winged Creatures

Paperback
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Author: Roy Freirich

ISBN-10: 0312378955

ISBN-13: 9780312378950

Category: Crimes - Fiction

Shots ring out in a local fast food restaurant. Teenager Anne Hagen and her best friend Jimmy hide under a table, watching a suicidal gunman randomly murder her father and others. Winged Creatures tells the stories of the survivors. . .\ Struggling to understand her father's death, Anne develops a religious hysteria. Jimmy becomes mute, protecting a secret that he and Anne share until it nearly destroys him and his already fractured family. Grazed by a bullet, driving instructor Charlie...

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“This well-crafted debut packs a wallop.”—Booklist“The survivors of a gun massacre struggle with the aftermath in Freirich's stark, impressive debut. While emotionally charged, the narrative isn't weighed down with sentiment as the characters search for, but don't necessarily find, closure.” —Publisher’s Weekly“A riveting debut novel about the aftermath of a mass shooting in a fast food restaurant. The author achieves the amazing feat of following an utterly disparate cast of dramatis personae through the vicissitudes of their lives as they are irrevocably scarred and changed forever. A sure-fire page-turner and, without question, has great movie written all over it, vividly reminiscent of Atom Egoyan's great The Sweet Hereafter." —Rex Pickett, author of Sideways“When a life is shattered, what is left is to hold onto? Roy Freirich’s group portrait of the aftermath of a random shooting delves into areas of the psyche rarely explored with such precision and delicacy. A relentlessly suspenseful and mesmerizing novel from a brilliantly original writer. Winged Creatures is an astounding debut.” —David Angsten, author of Dark Gold “A searing emotional drama of an American random shooting and the profoundly moving struggles of the survivors to regain their wholeness.” —R.H. Weber, author of Homeland “Songwriter and screenwriter Freirich’s debut novel offers an intriguing look at unique yet interrelated patterns of trauma and recovery.”—KirkusShots ring out in a local fast food restaurant. Teenager Anne Hagen and her best friend Jimmy hide under a table, watching a suicidal gunman randomly murder her father and others. Winged Creatures tells the stories of the survivors. . .Struggling to understand her father's death, Anne develops a religious hysteria. Jimmy becomes mute, protecting a secret that he and Anne share until it nearly destroys him and his already fractured family. Grazed by a bullet, driving instructor Charlie becomes obsessed with pressing his luck at a casino. By dangerous degrees, restaurant cashier Carla loses her ability to care for herself and her infant son. Dr. Laraby, an ER physician who failed to revive the shooting victims, turns to his wife as someone to “save,” while psychologist Ron Abler tries to counsel the witnesses, but meets suspicion and resistance. Winged Creatures intimately depicts the inner lives of five people driven by secret torments and dangerous compulsions, in flight from their own memories and dreams, as they struggle to regain their trust in the ordinary world. ROY FREIRICH is a screenwriter and songwriter living in Malibu, California. Winged Creatures is his first novel.Publishers WeeklyThe survivors of a gun massacre struggle with the aftermath in Freirich's stark, impressive debut. After a gunman walks into Carby's, a fast food chain restaurant along a Michigan highway, and kills two people before turning the gun on himself, a cross-section of society, including two teenagers, a driving instructor and a single mother emerge as survivors; their stories and viewpoints weave together for a tightly knit ensemble drama. Teenage Anne begins proselytizing religion after witnessing her father's death at Carby's, while her best friend, Jimmy-also a witness to the shooting-becomes mute after Anne makes him swear to not talk about her father. Driving instructor Charlie, wounded but alive, heads off to Vegas to test the luck that saved his life. Carla, a Carby's waitress and mother of an infant son, loses her grip on motherhood as she fixates on Bruce Laraby, an ER doctor who missed the carnage by moments. Bruce, meanwhile, has deep doubts about his abilities to heal, revealed through increasingly macabre actions involving his wife. Psychologist Ron Abler, charged with helping victims of the violence, finds no one wants his help. While emotionally charged, the narrative isn't weighed down with sentiment as the characters search for, but don't necessarily find, closure. (Jan.)Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

\ From the Publisher“This well-crafted debut packs a wallop.”—Booklist\ “The survivors of a gun massacre struggle with the aftermath in Freirich's stark, impressive debut. While emotionally charged, the narrative isn't weighed down with sentiment as the characters search for, but don't necessarily find, closure.”—Publisher’s Weekly\ “A riveting debut novel about the aftermath of a mass shooting in a fast food restaurant. The author achieves the amazing feat of following an utterly disparate cast of dramatis personae through the vicissitudes of their lives as they are irrevocably scarred and changed forever. A sure-fire page-turner and, without question, has great movie written all over it, vividly reminiscent of Atom Egoyan's great The Sweet Hereafter." —Rex Pickett, author of Sideways\ “When a life is shattered, what is left is to hold onto? Roy Freirich’s group portrait of the aftermath of a random shooting delves into areas of the psyche rarely explored with such precision and delicacy. A relentlessly suspenseful and mesmerizing novel from a brilliantly original writer. Winged Creatures is an astounding debut.”—David Angsten, author of Dark Gold\ “A searing emotional drama of an American random shooting and the profoundly moving struggles of the survivors to regain their wholeness.” —R.H. Weber, author of Homeland\ “Songwriter and screenwriter Freirich’s debut novel offers an intriguing look at unique yet interrelated patterns of trauma and recovery.” —Kirkus\ \ \ \ \ \ Publishers WeeklyThe survivors of a gun massacre struggle with the aftermath in Freirich's stark, impressive debut. After a gunman walks into Carby's, a fast food chain restaurant along a Michigan highway, and kills two people before turning the gun on himself, a cross-section of society, including two teenagers, a driving instructor and a single mother emerge as survivors; their stories and viewpoints weave together for a tightly knit ensemble drama. Teenage Anne begins proselytizing religion after witnessing her father's death at Carby's, while her best friend, Jimmy-also a witness to the shooting-becomes mute after Anne makes him swear to not talk about her father. Driving instructor Charlie, wounded but alive, heads off to Vegas to test the luck that saved his life. Carla, a Carby's waitress and mother of an infant son, loses her grip on motherhood as she fixates on Bruce Laraby, an ER doctor who missed the carnage by moments. Bruce, meanwhile, has deep doubts about his abilities to heal, revealed through increasingly macabre actions involving his wife. Psychologist Ron Abler, charged with helping victims of the violence, finds no one wants his help. While emotionally charged, the narrative isn't weighed down with sentiment as the characters search for, but don't necessarily find, closure. (Jan.)\ Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information\ \ \ School Library JournalAdult/High School -The crazed gunman who opens fire at a fast food restaurant is the catalyst that turns the psychic wounds of five people into chasms of PTSD. Bruce Laraby, an ER physician mourning the recent loss of his father, a highly respected doctor, left Carby's moments before the shooting. He treats the victims, but when he fails to save one of them, self-doubt sets in. Teens Anne and Jimmy share a booth with her father and see him gunned down. The man's lack of heroism throws her into a frenzy of evangelical behavior, building her father into an icon. Jimmy retreats into a silence that is enhanced by his bullying father, who refuses psychological attention for his son. Charlie is buckling under the pressure to make his business a success and to provide for his young family. While standing in line at Carby's, he is grazed in the head by a bullet. In a daze, he discharges himself from the ER and drives to a casino, where he indulges his gambling addiction. Waitress Carla is trying to support herself and her son on her meager wages. Unhurt physically, she comes to the ER several times with her child, claiming cold symptoms, but she is more interested in seeing the young doctor as the violence triggered in her an awareness of her profound loneliness. Freirich neither characterizes the gunman nor analyzes his motivation. Readers will wonder what fissure in his life exploded into such a violent act. Unfortunately, school and public shootings continue to erupt on an all-too-regular basis, making Winged Creatures a relevant read.-Paula Decker, Charter Oak High School, Covina, CA\ \ \