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infra
is
is a
"smashing" tale, crunching words and plot through a hyper expressionistic
viewpoint. Ron Dakron's first novel is a chilling tale of obsession, sex and
ghosts, all told through a poetic dreamscape of words. infra
careens through a late 20th century Europe in search of ultimate ecstacy.
A failed artist receives a
letter. It's a photo of his lost love, brutally murdered. He
knows who the killer is—a young Venice mafioso. He
does nothing, until the dreams start. Then he plots
vengeance. He buys a gun in Paris, then sleeps on
trains towards death. He slays the mafioso.
Yet the killer starts chasing him, through Spain and
nightmares. And now the fun begins.
Reviews
The Seattle
Weekly, November 9, 1988, Matthew
Kangas reviewing infra:
"infra is a wild ride . . .
there’s lots of sex, drugs, rock’n’roll, wild American tourists on the
loose, and a level of writing that attains a very convincing and enviable
poetic reality all its own . . . I loved it. infra will be a hard act to
follow."
Ergo Magazine, July 21, 1988, Judith Roche reviewing
infra:
"Dakron is a poet and the
language of this novel is eroticized poetry married to story . . . This is a
sex and violence story told more in dream and nightmare than in daytime
reality state and the language has the beautiful and horrifying surreal
sensory quality of the dream."
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