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Pig Boy's Wicked Bird: A Memoir

Pig Boy's Wicked Bird: A Memoir

List Price: $22.95
Your Price: $15.61
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Funny and Heartwrenching
Review: "Pig Boy's Wicked Bird" is the perfect antidote to so much of what passes for good writing these days (urban, hip, detached, clever, etc). In prose that is artful because of its precision and care, Doug Crandell writes about growing up in a sharecropping family in rural Indiana, a subject that is neither urban nor hip, but that is worthy of literature's best -- and I'm happy to report that Mr. Crandell has pulled it off. From its haunting opening (the legend of Pig Boy himself), we feel securely in the hands of a talented storyteller, and it is with no difficulty that we give ourselves over to this book, which is by turns funny and heartwrenching. If you enjoy Tobias Wolff's "This Boy's Life," you'll enjoy "Pig Boy's Wicked Bird."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Indiana Wants Me, But I Can't Go Back There
Review: Doug Crandall, former little Pig Boy of the Heartland, brings us a heart-rendering, oftentimes snorting food-out-the-nose-from-laughing memoir of friendship with farm animals and dealing with life's tragedys. Poetically written by the now grown up Mr. Crandall, even city girls like me can appreciate his love of family, roots and Jimmy Carter. If you love crusty old men, goofy dogs and little piglets, you'll love this story as I did.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Don't Enter The Midwest Without Crandell's Pigboy
Review: Like most everyone else, I breeze through Indiana on my way to somewhere else that I am certain is far more interesting. All the while I wonder: Why do these people live here? What do they do here? Why do they want to stay here? Pig Boy's Wicked Bird will answer your questions. Crandell brings to life "those people" that you so easily dismissed as they come to life not out there where it is safe, but inside of you. This is a great book. The wisest among us will catch this young already award-winning writer's first novel early and say "Well I'll be damned". This book will someday be required reading in every college english department and missed of course by every college psychology department. Your search for the meaning of life is over. Thank Doug Crandell.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Peculiar Power and Distinct Nostalgia
Review: There is a distinct nostalgia in Pig Boy's Wicked Bird. The peculiar power in this depiction of an American family is relevant to anytime, place, or condition. The author uses beautiful language and rhythmical sentences to creat a compact telling of this humorous and poignant memoir. The business of living can be lonely. The reader can make profitable use of the insights illuminated throughout this story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good writing does exist!
Review: There is a wealth of people out there who have grown up in a family that doesn't seem just right. Television for a lack of decent material exploits the dysfunctional family as it exaggerates the flaws of family life in America. "Pig Boy's Wicked Bird" by Doug Crandell tells a different side of the story. Yes, life is full of absurdity and tragedy but what comes out of this book is a recollection of our own past growing up and as weird as it seemed...it was wonderful too. Intelligently written and a delight to read I give it 2 thumbs up and a nub for good measure! This is a great life story!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I agree exactly with John McNally
Review: This is a book I stepped into with confidence and pleasure, and emerged from profoundly satisfied.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Pig Boy Rules!
Review: When I finished reading Moby Dick, I knew a bit about killing whales, and a bit more about the struggle between good and evil. After reading Doug Crandell, I know a bit about pigs, and a whole lot more about life. This is the book to pick up if you're tired of reading. It's the perfect dissection of familial sturm and drang; the book that captures the fragility and resourcefulness of children; the book that makes me want to write-in Jimmy Carter for President and move to Indiana. I wish I'd paid more attention all those years I worked on the farm.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Tell me another story Daddy!
Review: When I read Mishima's "Confessions of a Mask" I learned a lot about the inner workings of a genius madman exposing his biolgical reality. When I read Pig boy I find an explosively intriguing story about humanity we rarely are gifted with. Bukowski might have written this if he hadn't grown up in LA poverty (and drank a little less) instead of Crandell's middle farm poverty. Delaney's Dahlgren.. something about Crandell's writing takes me to memories of my favorite books and authors. Bravo, Mr Crandell now you people go out and get this book, you will be glad you did.


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