Earth Angel

by R. F. Dietrich


Formats

Hardcover
$20.00
$16.50
Softcover
$11.50
$10.50
Hardcover
$16.50

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 1/16/2003

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 172
ISBN : 9781403357939
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 172
ISBN : 9781403357922

About the Book

Earth Angel is a wryly narrated nostalgia piece about the laughable but lovable 1950s in small town America. On movie dates then the hormonal honey pot was constantly stirred by the likes of such voluptuous Hollywood angels as Marilyn Monroe, Janet Leigh, Liz Taylor, Jane Russell, Sophia Loren, Brigette Bardot, Jayne Mansfield, and on and on. This was especially tormenting if you dated a girl who looked like Marilyn Monroe but whose angelic ambitions were only of the biblical sort. This is the fate of the novel's hero, "Reverend Steve," a young lad considering the ministry and with biblical ambitions of his own but struggling with an erotic imagination that is over-stimulated by the appearance in his Ohio town of so many gorgeous angels, both on screen and sitting right next to him at the drive-in movie. Well, where else could this lead but to out-of-wedlock teen pregnancy? The twist here is that the teen who gets "knocked up" is the virginal "Reverend Steve." And the baby he delivers, a charming and surprisingly philosophical girl named Toby, is a member of your family. But what does it mean that it was an angel who knocked him up? Or that this results in another virgin birth?


About the Author

R. F. Dietrich is an English professor at the University of South Florida, and Earth Angel is his second novel. His first novel, The Final Solution (ISBN 0-595-13273-1), is a prophetic evocation of the Armageddon lust that consumes some people as they employ apocalyptic terrorism to vindicate their religious beliefs. Its tale of messianic ambition foresaw the events of September 11, 2001, and predicted an even darker future. In his second novel, the author shifts from dark to light, from looking into a devilish future to looking wryly back upon a youthful search for a love that would reconcile earth and heaven. Both novels derive from the author’s realization that literature can still serve a religious function, as at its origins.