Invisible Sentence

Fiction & Literature, Anthologies
Cover of the book Invisible Sentence by Darian Lane, Darian Lane
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Author: Darian Lane ISBN: 9781310237522
Publisher: Darian Lane Publication: February 10, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Darian Lane
ISBN: 9781310237522
Publisher: Darian Lane
Publication: February 10, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

The action starts on the first page: Vincent Raswell, our protagonist, gives a brief account of his three friends, hyped-up and self-concerned fellows who Vincent no longer feels compatible with. So he leaves them. We jump into the car with a new Vincent, relieved of the burdens of fakery and meaninglessness.

Raswell has taken to a wanderer's life; he's homeless, without a future, without a job; his only concern is a constant investigation into the truth around him. Vincent probes into everyone's and anyone's life: a retail clerk, a pizza store patron, a homeless kid at a bus stop; all are studies for Vincent and his quest to grab at deeper meanings.

Invisible Sentence is no holds barred self-expression. It sings a singular song about Los Angeles, about his day and age, and about this Generation's view of it. Raswell isn't judging one race as opposed to another; instead he serves us all up black, white, rich, poor and simply says: Look at us. He peels back the veneer and invites us all to look at ourselves, to much amusement and much horror.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The action starts on the first page: Vincent Raswell, our protagonist, gives a brief account of his three friends, hyped-up and self-concerned fellows who Vincent no longer feels compatible with. So he leaves them. We jump into the car with a new Vincent, relieved of the burdens of fakery and meaninglessness.

Raswell has taken to a wanderer's life; he's homeless, without a future, without a job; his only concern is a constant investigation into the truth around him. Vincent probes into everyone's and anyone's life: a retail clerk, a pizza store patron, a homeless kid at a bus stop; all are studies for Vincent and his quest to grab at deeper meanings.

Invisible Sentence is no holds barred self-expression. It sings a singular song about Los Angeles, about his day and age, and about this Generation's view of it. Raswell isn't judging one race as opposed to another; instead he serves us all up black, white, rich, poor and simply says: Look at us. He peels back the veneer and invites us all to look at ourselves, to much amusement and much horror.

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