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On a dark winter morning, nine-year-old Petey Myshkin Stephenson is taken by a mysterious, battered yellow trolley he has never seen before to a place called "Otherwise." There he discovers a place in the middle of summer, with a green sky, where birds fly upside down and the sun rises in the west. It is also in the midst of a war. The trolley picks up a young girl named Sharlotta, who has just escaped a battle where her family was abducted by the invaders because they believe the father holds the secret to a Spell that will give them control of the worlds of both Otherwise and Howtiz - the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
On a dark winter morning, nine-year-old Petey Myshkin Stephenson is taken by a mysterious, battered yellow trolley he has never seen before to a place called "Otherwise." There he discovers a place in the middle of summer, with a green sky, where birds fly upside down and the sun rises in the west. It is also in the midst of a war. The trolley picks up a young girl named Sharlotta, who has just escaped a battle where her family was abducted by the invaders because they believe the father holds the secret to a Spell that will give them control of the worlds of both Otherwise and Howtiz - the "real" world, where Petey lives. And Petey joins Sharlotta to find and rescue her family. After numerous adventures involving encounters with two young members of the invading tribe and a cruel prince who captured, and later will threaten to torture Sharlotta's family into confessing the Spell, Petey and Sharlotta sneak into the enemy camp and discover where the girl's family is being held, buried underground beneath a black tent. Despite seemingly insuperable obstacles, the two rescue the captives and, after perilous encounters with enemies and false friends - and with the aid of one of the young "enemies" who turns out to be a powerful ally - Petey, Sharlotta and her family finally manage to escape the camp. In the meantime, the camp has caught fire as a result of Petey's clever ploys during the family's rescue. The camp burns to the ground in a vast conflagration, and the invaders are forced to return home in a humiliating defeat. The Spell is secured and the world is saved, and Petey returns to Howtiz - but not before Sharlotta gives him a key to remember her by. But after Petey returns home no one believes his story, and even he is not sure: maybe what he just lived through was just a dream after all. Then he discovers a funny lump in his pocket: Sharlotta's key.
Autorenporträt
I grew up near the Atlantic seaboard and in the farm country of eastern Pennsylvania, and later in what many call Mexico's most beautiful city, Guadalajara; immersing myself in Russian fiction and English poetry and the Romantic music I found in my father's dusty record collection. I began writing my own stories and poems, a pirate romance and a philosophical novel; putting on magic shows and puppet plays, printing a daily "newspaper," dabbling in oil paints, inventing radio plays on a tape recorder, composing "classical music," and experimenting with a chemistry set that one day nearly blew up my bedroom. I managed to survive my perpetually changing hobbies and became school president of my junior high school, the murderer in a school detective play, and, in my senior year, poetry editor of my high school magazine. I joined a revolutionary brigade of rebellious students at Temple University, where I studied history, literature and philosophy in between bouts of guerrilla theater and counseling disaffected teenagers in the suburbs and ghettoes of Philadelphia. By my early twenties I was publishing journalism in countercultural and mainstream periodicals, giving poetry readings, and directing theater in Philadelphia, where I lived at the time.In the early 1970s I won the Temple University Student Poetry contest and in the late 1970s drove with a friend across the country to California, and have lived in San Francisco ever since. My essays, criticism, experimental fiction, and poetry have appeared in literary magazines and periodicals in the United States and Great Britain. I have also given readings in cities across the U.S. and in Canada and the U.K.My first published book, A Spy in the Ruins, was hailed by the Miguel de Cervantes Award¿winning novelist Juan Goytisolo as one of the finest American novels of the new century and compared to the work of Thomas Pynchon and William Gass. I have published two other novels since: Voyage to a Phantom City (". . . an enormous achievement ... a spare beauty in all its baroque splendor". -- Peter Bush, award-winning translator) and Meditations on Love and Catastrophe at The Liars' Cafe, "An . . . often captivating love story" - Kirkus Reviews) as well as two collections of short fiction: In the American Night ("a new classic of American fiction" - Martine Compton) and Dangerous Stories for Boys ("There is something for everyone in these stories" - Pauline Butcher Bird).My first book of poetry, The Rose Shipwreck: Poems and Photographs ("a haunting juxtaposition of verse and photos [that] shouldn't be missed by any who appreciate urban images, poetry, and art" - D. Donovan, Midwest Book Review), appeared in 2013, and my second, Chien Lunatique (a work of "visionary authority" - Ernest Hilbert, winner of the 2017 Poets' Prize), five years later. My third collection - The Socialist's Garden of Verses - won a PEN Oakland Josephine Miles Award and was named one of the "Top 100 Indie Books of 2021" by Kirkus Reviews. I have also written plays produced and radio broadcast in the Bay Area. I have published journalism in many periodicals across the U.S. and am a contributing writer for Synchronized Chaos Magazine. My work has been nominated for both the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Web.In 1989 I founded, and am currently co-editor, of the literary and arts webzine Caveat Lector. I lived as the domestic partner of the translator and interpreter Keiko Kuroda for four decades until her death in early 2021. I now live alone in a penthouse apartment I call "The Aerie" as it sits on a windy bluff with a view across downtown San Francisco and the north Bay; with Tonton (the last of the many cats we brought up together) and a garden of lilies, acacia, climbing vines and roses tucked behind The Aerie that Keiko cultivated over her final years.