In Quest of Another's Suicide

by Morton N. Felix


Formats

Softcover
£14.49
Softcover
£14.49

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 13/02/2006

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 232
ISBN : 9781420874693

About the Book

Imagine a man, aged 44, successful but alienated from self and family, preparing to end his life by jumping in front of a New York City subway train.  As he prepares to jump, after much rehearsal, we are given a full view of his internal meanderings.  Ready to jump, he admires a pretty woman on the opposite platform.  He hears a train -- it is hers -- she preempts him, jumping and is annihilated.  He flees the subway, becoming obsessed with whom this woman is who has redeemed him through her suicide.  An odyssey follows -- he steals her diaries, is implicated in her murder, and finds love -- finally being released from his suicide.


About the Author

Morton Felix was born in New York City in 1935. He began writing poetry at an early age and it has been second nature for him to keep notebooks to record inner and outer experience.   He received his M.A. and Ph.D. at the University of Connecticut (1963) in Clinical Psychology and has worked in several settings in this field.   Vagron Books published his first chapbook Baroque in Chaos under the editorship of Felix Stefanile, noted editor of poetry.  He was one of the original editors of The Wormwood Review, a magazine which has been in existence for quite a long time.  His other publications are titled:  Cleft between Heaven and Earth (Illuminations Press); An Octave Higher than Grief (Libra Press); and They Say You like Dandelions (Galley Sail press).

 

He was awarded a fellowship in playwriting, in 1976, to the Squaw Valley of Community Writer’s Conference where his play, This Side of Felony, was produced.  In 1980, his play A Pulette of Leaves was done by ACT in their “Plays in Progress” series.  Gathering the Grace of Others (Beatitude Press) is his most recent publication.  He has one daughter, Lisa, a fine writer in her own right.  He has been married to Susan for forty-eight years; she is a gifted ceramacist and developer of non-profit housing in Berkeley.  He considers he as “my religion.”