Army Girl
Mary Devstenia, Army Girl, is a normal young woman attempting to make her way in a reality which seems determined to crush her every hope and besmirch her cherished dreams of love, independence, and a modest yet meaningful place in the world. Her marriage falls apart. Passion becomes humiliation and rape. Family tradition and working-class necessity turn her both to a community college where she meets the compelling Marina Carey, her teacher and possible soul mate, and to the Army Reserve which leads her to a desert highway and a fatal meeting with Fatima and her child.

From that point on, her life becomes a spiral, whether downward or upward, one cannot say. She finds comfort of a sort in Lenard Cohan, an alienated Vietnam veteran. Her father, David, remains her strength to the end. But is she not, as one of her tattoos suggests, merely a plaything of the gods? Are not they all?

Maybe the grotesque biker wanna-be Paulie Perfunctorio has the answer. Or perhaps Jennifer, the nuclear cockroach who is possessed of human intellect. And then there are always Pam and her half-brother Jesus who may know. But they simply will not tell.
1118886357
Army Girl
Mary Devstenia, Army Girl, is a normal young woman attempting to make her way in a reality which seems determined to crush her every hope and besmirch her cherished dreams of love, independence, and a modest yet meaningful place in the world. Her marriage falls apart. Passion becomes humiliation and rape. Family tradition and working-class necessity turn her both to a community college where she meets the compelling Marina Carey, her teacher and possible soul mate, and to the Army Reserve which leads her to a desert highway and a fatal meeting with Fatima and her child.

From that point on, her life becomes a spiral, whether downward or upward, one cannot say. She finds comfort of a sort in Lenard Cohan, an alienated Vietnam veteran. Her father, David, remains her strength to the end. But is she not, as one of her tattoos suggests, merely a plaything of the gods? Are not they all?

Maybe the grotesque biker wanna-be Paulie Perfunctorio has the answer. Or perhaps Jennifer, the nuclear cockroach who is possessed of human intellect. And then there are always Pam and her half-brother Jesus who may know. But they simply will not tell.
5.99 In Stock
Army Girl

Army Girl

by J. S. Mcinroy
Army Girl

Army Girl

by J. S. Mcinroy

eBook

$5.99 

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Overview

Mary Devstenia, Army Girl, is a normal young woman attempting to make her way in a reality which seems determined to crush her every hope and besmirch her cherished dreams of love, independence, and a modest yet meaningful place in the world. Her marriage falls apart. Passion becomes humiliation and rape. Family tradition and working-class necessity turn her both to a community college where she meets the compelling Marina Carey, her teacher and possible soul mate, and to the Army Reserve which leads her to a desert highway and a fatal meeting with Fatima and her child.

From that point on, her life becomes a spiral, whether downward or upward, one cannot say. She finds comfort of a sort in Lenard Cohan, an alienated Vietnam veteran. Her father, David, remains her strength to the end. But is she not, as one of her tattoos suggests, merely a plaything of the gods? Are not they all?

Maybe the grotesque biker wanna-be Paulie Perfunctorio has the answer. Or perhaps Jennifer, the nuclear cockroach who is possessed of human intellect. And then there are always Pam and her half-brother Jesus who may know. But they simply will not tell.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940149276424
Publisher: Slate Run Publishing, LLC
Publication date: 01/12/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 470
File size: 973 KB

About the Author

J.S. McInroy is a man who, as have the characters in his novels, has experienced a time of reckoning, and who has emerged from that neither particle nor wave, neither light nor darkness. He has no quest, no purpose; what he does have, however, is a semi-humorous urge to, by employing his own life as an instrument while not defining it as such, cast doubt upon Bob Dylan’s statement that “Some of us are prisoners. The rest of us are guards,” by minute by minute, nanosecond by nanosecond refusing to become imprisoned within his own identity as well as revolting against the notion that it is his bounden duty to stand watch over his sacred self.
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