Antipodes 20
by
Book Details
About the Book
A collection of twenty short stories, some related, some not, about people and events in two places half way around the world from each other-- Hawaii and the Mediterranean; thus the title Antipodes. These are stories of passion and pathos, love and hatred, vengeance and intrigue--in short "the human condition"--which reveal the well-traveled John Pascal's intimacy with those two places and with the men and women, and even the animals who inhabit them. John Pascal is a master at portraying irony--as in "Digger Malloy," the story of a man who unwittingly has a bizarre encounter with his estranged daughter. The conclusion to this story will astound you, for Pascal also is adept at producing the surprise ending. Another example of this ability is found in his prize-winning tale "A Fragile Vessel" where, as described in London's The European, "...at a Sicilian villa dark secrets bubble to the surface, ending an old friendship for ever." "The Maine Coon Cat and the Tiger Snake," in which a man seeks revenge from his late wife's lover, is a lesson in the emotions of love and hatred. This clever tale has an unforgettable climax, at the center of which is a gifted feline. The collection closes with "The Imposture," a tour de force which demonstrates the entire panoply of Pascal's writing talents. You won't know whether or not you believe what you have read in "The Imposture"; what you will know is that you'll want to read another twenty stories by John Pascal. ************* "John Pascal is determined to reinstate the short story to its proper place in English literature. Antipodes 20 is proof that he has every chance of doing so." "John Pascal writes about people in the tradition of Guy de Maupassant, W. Somerset Maugham, and Eric Ambler, but with a refreshing modernity."
About the Author
After serving twenty years as a U.S.
Army officer in such fields as intelligence, research and development,
psychological and political warfare, and special operations, (during a tour of
duty in Vietnam he was Senior U.S. Advisor to the then Republic of Vietnam
Armed Forces Political Warfare College) John Pascal acquired an additional
bachelor's degree and two master's degrees.
He then taught English and political science at the university level in
both Germany and Italy for ten years.
He has traveled widely in Europe and Africa as well as in South and
Central America, lived for seventeen years in Hawaii and for six years in the
Near and Far East. He began writing
full-time in 1992, and in 1993 won the élan
short story prize in London's The
European, and in 1996 won the Writer's
Digest first prize for unrhymed poetry. He has published Antipodes 10, a collection of short
stories, and The Dartist, a novel.
When he is not traveling he lives in Upstate New York, where he writes prose
and poetry.