book cover of Life On the Bolotomy
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Life On the Bolotomy

(1983)
(The third book in the Peter Leroy series)
A novel by

 
 
Peter Leroy recalls a childhood journey of discovery that he made from the mouth of the Bolotomy River to its source, traveling with his best (and imaginary) friend Rodney "Raskol" Lodkochnikov. The journey begins with the work of turning a packing case (which Cap'n Andrew Leech intends to use, later, as a coffin) into a shallow-draft boat, it involves encounters with a philosophical vagrant and a gaggle of beautiful nymphs, and it ends with the metaphor of life as a river turned on its head.

"Life on the Bolotomy concerns the river journey of Peter and his chum Raskolnikov to the source of the Bolotomy River - a riotous inversion of both Thoreau's Merrimack expedition and Huck 'n' Jim's Mississippi quest"
John Stark Bellamy II, Cleveland Plain Dealer

"The cumulative effect of Kraft's work is of a sober humor that refuses easy answers. . . . This is crafty work indeed and certain to endure when more pretentious and more touted writers are forgotten."
Bob Williams, The Compulsive Reader

"Reading the Peter Leroy saga is akin to watching a champion juggler deftly keep dozens of balls in the air while executing an intricate double-time dance routine - all without breathing hard. . . . Sentimental, loving, raucous, wise, and great fun, this is simply not to be missed."
Booklist

"[Kraft's Peter Leroy] series is smart, funny, warmly inviting, and delightfully impossible to define."
Kate Bernheimer, The Oregonian

"Eric Kraft's essential subject is suburban boyhood - in particular, that moment when it loses its innocence. . . . Like Lawrence Sterne, Kraft is unashamedly sentimental, digressive, and extremely funny; like Proust, profoundly nostalgic and obsessed with loss. The typical Kraft novel is a laugh-out-loud read with undertones of grief and ruefulness. Almost all of his books revolve around a single individual, Peter Leroy, who is now . . . as fully realized as any character in current American literature. . . . Under the surface humor, Kraft's take on the national experience is thoughtful, disturbing, and unlike that of any other American writer."
Anthony Brandt, Men's Journal

LENGTH: novella, approximately 20,000 words, 96 pages in the trade paperback edition


Genre: General Fiction

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