Wasted and Wounded: Narrative in Tom Waits’ Songs

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Wasted and Wounded: Narrative in Tom Waits’ Songs by Barry Pomeroy, Barry Pomeroy
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Barry Pomeroy ISBN: 9781987922585
Publisher: Barry Pomeroy Publication: March 20, 2018
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Barry Pomeroy
ISBN: 9781987922585
Publisher: Barry Pomeroy
Publication: March 20, 2018
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

This collection unearths the stories that run parallel to those of Tom Waits’ early songs. They do not retell as much as push the envelope wider, strain the meaning of a few lines, and stretch the place the song occupies so that the river rats and abandoned dogs, crying children on the street and shifty-eyed suits, salesmen with their patter and hobos with their rags, can shoulder out a space. Searching for the American dream and distracted by a promise, a woman tosses pennies into liquor bottles in a half moon bar, a fast car leaves the parking lot with the radio on full, even while a knife fight wounds the street and an old man pumps quarters into a one-armed bandit.
The songs tell the story of a man who carries the Midwest on him like a ring he can’t get off, who rattles on the wide streets of the American west like a tin can tied to a junkyard dog and crowds in the eastern cities where the brownstones spill out onto the broad steps of long afternoons. Refusing to be caught by the despair of the endless nights, he jockeys for dollars with the sell-outs, fishes for the glisten of silver among the litter in the alleys, and sleeps under the bridge on a rainy night.

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

This collection unearths the stories that run parallel to those of Tom Waits’ early songs. They do not retell as much as push the envelope wider, strain the meaning of a few lines, and stretch the place the song occupies so that the river rats and abandoned dogs, crying children on the street and shifty-eyed suits, salesmen with their patter and hobos with their rags, can shoulder out a space. Searching for the American dream and distracted by a promise, a woman tosses pennies into liquor bottles in a half moon bar, a fast car leaves the parking lot with the radio on full, even while a knife fight wounds the street and an old man pumps quarters into a one-armed bandit.
The songs tell the story of a man who carries the Midwest on him like a ring he can’t get off, who rattles on the wide streets of the American west like a tin can tied to a junkyard dog and crowds in the eastern cities where the brownstones spill out onto the broad steps of long afternoons. Refusing to be caught by the despair of the endless nights, he jockeys for dollars with the sell-outs, fishes for the glisten of silver among the litter in the alleys, and sleeps under the bridge on a rainy night.

More books from Barry Pomeroy

Cover of the book Christmas Stories: or What Christmas Means to Me by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book A Million Castaways by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book Isolates and Survivors: Stories of Resilience by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book Flat Earth by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book Working for Ray by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book A Mad Trapper's Examination of Reader Response and Reception Theory by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book Living in Ashton by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book H.G. Wells’ World Brain: Annotated with an Introduction by Barry Pomeroy, PhD by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book Innocent When You Dream: Narrative in Tom Waits' Songs - the middle years by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book Writing This Ability: Parables and True Stories by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book The First Colonist on Mars: Courtesy of the Mars Historical Society by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book A Storied Winnipeg: Fables and Local Legends by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book In Sight of Memory: The Legend of the Lost Colony by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book Going Back to Bangkok: A Return to South East Asia - 2011 by Barry Pomeroy
Cover of the book Multiple Personality Disorder a Poem in Dialogue by Barry Pomeroy
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy