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Bridges - A tale of Niagara

por d k LeVick

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Peeling back time, LeVick's "Bridges" will introduce readers to the hermit living on Niagra Falls, achieving his quest to become one with it; experience the day the Falls stopped, exploring a riverbed never before exposed ¿ until the water returns in a frenzy; witness slavery through the eyes of a runaway girl riding the Underground Railroad - paying the fare to ride that train; feel the clash between cultures when the path of a drummer boy converges with an Iroquois brave at the "Devil's Hole" massacre. "Bridges" is much more than a simple tale of camaraderie and teenage exploits. Author d k LeVick creates a fascinating and engaging tale that is rich in both historical fact and ingenious fiction, as he weaves stories of long-ago. LeVick brings together a series of unique historical events, a twist of mystery and revelation and a group of 1962 teenagers caught up in the complexities of a changing world around them. LeVick's narrative is so evocative that you will feel you're along on the various expeditions; his attention to detail is so precise that you might just hear the ice crack and feel a tremor beneath your feet. "Bridges" is a kaleidoscopic journey of adventure and history exploring the questions confronting people of all ages.… (más)
Añadido recientemente porAnietzerck, SRumzi, Emlyn_Chand, csbmapalo
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Excellent book. Chock full of friendship, growing up and adventure. Well written and touching. It reminded me of Neil Simon's Biloxi Blues. The boys in Bridges were full of the piss and vinegar of the curious and the ignorant. But, by the end of their hardship, they had grown and their friendships solidified. Very good read. ( )
  SRumzi | Nov 13, 2011 |
Excellent book. Chock full of friendship, growing up and adventure. Well written and touching. It reminded me of Neil Simon's Biloxi Blues. The boys in Bridges were full of the piss and vinegar of the curious and the ignorant. But, by the end of their hardship, they had grown and their friendships solidified. Very good read. ( )
  SRumzi | Nov 13, 2011 |
Nature—it is both majestic and deadly, subjugated and unconquerable, mysterious and comprehendible. Niagara Falls in particular holds many secrets just beneath its surface.Five boys decide to challenge Niagara after seeing an old photograph on the wall of their favorite hangout. Several nineteenth century pedestrians stand just before the falls on an ice bridge, the shop’s proprietor Ol’ Gordy explains. In the winter, the surface freezes over, but the rapids continue to rush agitatedly beneath the surface. It’s dangerous and illegal to go out on the ice bridge, he warns them. No place for boys; no place for anyone.Adventure! Motivated by the heroic stupidity so often present in young boys and a desire to see their picture hang on the wall of Ol’ Gordy’s shop, the friends decide to journey into the Niagara Gorge.They bring extra socks to warm their toes, a smattering of junk food to sustain their bellies, and a camera to document their adventures, but they take no measures to prepare themselves emotionally for the harrowing quest.What’s the worst that can happen? The boys think, full of inflated self belief. When a rescue team appears, they realize that they’ve been caught in their law-breaking antics. Rather than risk punishment, they run deeper into the Gorge, believing they can find a way out for themselves. If they are to emerge from the Gorge at all, they will surely emerge as men, having conquered their childhoods as well as nature itself.The friends’ tale is interwoven with those of others whose lives have been touched by Niagara—the musical hermit who escapes society’s demands by becoming one with the river, the honeymooning couples who were there the day the falls stopped flowing, the runaway slaves who crossed the bridge from oppression into the freeman lands of Canada, the drummer boy who was rescued from certain death at the hands of an enemy warrior. Their stories are Niagara’s stories.“Great things usually don’t happen to great people,” our narrator informs us. “Things happen to regular people, and great people emerge.”dk LeVick’s debut novel, Bridges: A Tale of Niagara is a story to which we can all relate. We as a society, we as individuals, must traverse life’s bridges if ever we are to reach our intended destinations. From ignorance to knowledge, brutality to grace, childhood to adulthood, we must all journey forth—there is no holding back.With every word, the author’s careful research into the area, the history, and the characters is readily apparent. He seamlessly weaves the disparate threads together through the recurrence of themes and important physical artifacts.Bridges is a must-read for those who have ever struggled to know themselves. LeVick reminds us to look to our pasts and to our homes, and we will surely find ourselves.
  Emlyn_Chand | Sep 18, 2011 |
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Peeling back time, LeVick's "Bridges" will introduce readers to the hermit living on Niagra Falls, achieving his quest to become one with it; experience the day the Falls stopped, exploring a riverbed never before exposed ¿ until the water returns in a frenzy; witness slavery through the eyes of a runaway girl riding the Underground Railroad - paying the fare to ride that train; feel the clash between cultures when the path of a drummer boy converges with an Iroquois brave at the "Devil's Hole" massacre. "Bridges" is much more than a simple tale of camaraderie and teenage exploits. Author d k LeVick creates a fascinating and engaging tale that is rich in both historical fact and ingenious fiction, as he weaves stories of long-ago. LeVick brings together a series of unique historical events, a twist of mystery and revelation and a group of 1962 teenagers caught up in the complexities of a changing world around them. LeVick's narrative is so evocative that you will feel you're along on the various expeditions; his attention to detail is so precise that you might just hear the ice crack and feel a tremor beneath your feet. "Bridges" is a kaleidoscopic journey of adventure and history exploring the questions confronting people of all ages.

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