American gospel : a novel /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Enger, Lin, author.
Imprint:Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, [2020]
Description:251 pages ; 24 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12407470
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9781517910549
9781452965727
1517910544
Summary:"On a small farm beside a lake in Minnesota's north woods an old man is waiting for the Rapture, which God has told him will happen in two weeks, on August 19, 1974. When word gets out, Last Days Ranch becomes ground zero for The End, drawing zealots, curiosity seekers, and reporters--among them the prophet's son, a skeptical New York writer suddenly caught between his overbearing father and the news story of a lifetime. Into the mix comes Melanie Magnus, a glamorous actress who has old allegiances to both father and son. Meanwhile, Nixon's resignation has transfixed the nation... Lin Enger draws us into these disparate yet inextricably linked lives, each enacting a part in a drama forever being replayed and together moving toward a conclusion that will take all of them--and us--by surprise."--Provided by publisher.
Other form:Online version: Enger, Lin, American gospel Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, [2020] 9781452965727
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Enger (The High Divide) sets this potent novel in mid-1970s Battlepoint, Minn., where pious preacher Enoch, leader of a religious commune, has collapsed. After Enoch is revived, he claims an angel visited him to announce a rapturous biblical prophecy, in which Jesus Christ will appear to "snatch up all true believers" on Enoch's land in two weeks' time. Enoch's vision propels much of the plot, into which Enger dexterously adds Enoch's son, Peter, a struggling 30-something Manhattan journalist hoping to cover President Nixon's anticipated resignation, and Melanie, a Hollywood starlet and boyhood love of Peter's, whom Enoch convinces to travel to Battlepoint to participate in the communal pilgrimage to the place now known as "Ground Jesus." Word of Melanie's sojourn spreads quickly across the celebrity newswires, sparking a media frenzy and a poignant epic showdown at the zero hour. Enger takes on a lot, from playing on the momentum and the mysteries of religious prognostication to the innate familial allegiance between prophetic father and skeptical son, and for the most part it ties together, though readers may feel the primary characters are a bit underdeveloped. Still, Enger effectively expands on themes of belonging and blind devotion as a group of true believers face their final day of reckoning. While Enger doesn't reach the height he seeks, there is plenty of apocalyptic excitement. (Oct.)

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review