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The Flamer

Ben Rogers

$35.95

Paperback

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English
Baobab Press
11 December 2018
All boys tinker with fire. Oby Brooks holes up in a backyard shed to experiment with napalm recipes. He has a hand in burning down his own house, twice. He can't help it: his very DNA seems made of TNT. Meanwhile, amidst the detonations, Oby's sexuality is up for grabs. Parents, mountain men, chemistry teachers, neighbors, and arson inspectors all try in their own quirky ways to usher Oby into adulthood with his fingers any eyelashes intact. In the end, the question is whether Oby's nature will be nurtured, or neutered. Oh, and, will he land a Nobel Prize?
By:  
Imprint:   Baobab Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 203mm,  Width: 139mm, 
ISBN:   9781936097173
ISBN 10:   1936097176
Pages:   205
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 13 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Ben was born in 1977 and lives in Reno, Nevada with his wife and two daughters. His writing has appeared in a variety of literary publications and earned a Nevada Arts Council Fellowship and a Sierra Arts Foundation grant. He is the lead author of Nanotechnology: Understanding Small Systems (CRC Press), the first-ever comprehensive college textbook on nanotechnology, now in its 3rd edition, and also Nanotechnology: The Whole Story (CRC Press), a general audience book. He studied engineering and journalism in college and has a masters degree in mechanical engineering. He's worked as a business analyst, a newspaper reporter, a teacher, and a scientist at various labs, including Oak Ridge National Laboratory and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. (More about this work can be found here.) Since 2004 he has been the Principal Engineer at Nevada Nanotech Systems.

Reviews for The Flamer

One of the wisest, funniest, strangest novels I've ever read, narrated by one of the most unique characters I've had the pleasure of meeting in American fiction. I treasure this book. -Christopher Coake, author of You Came Back; GRANTA Best Young American Novelist ...diabolically funny... Brainy and splendidly profane, Rogers's writing is incendiary and hypnotic. We watch with an arsonist's glee as his boy genius lights the fuse of his own volatile adolescence. A sizzling debut. -Claire Vaye Watkins, author of Battleborn & 2013 Story Prize winner ...a highly original and delightful debut.... Rogers writes with crisp precision about subjects as varied as science, the complex matters of the heart, and the Great Basin landscape. -High Country News The seamless transition the protagonist, Oby, makes ... is written so phenomenally well that the reader finishes wondering when the hell it happened. [The book's] readability lies with its wide cast of well-written characters....characters that the reader will walk away remembering. -On Fiction Writing Like Harper Lee and Mark Twain, Ben Rogers has tapped into regional America to scribe a coming-of-age story that is universal in its truths. The Flamer debuts a fine new writer who understands his craft...but even better a writer who understands human nature. -H. Lee Barnes, author of When We Walked Above the Clouds & Member of Nevada Writers Hall of Fame ... a witty, Nevada-based coming-of-age story... -Las Vegas Review Journal Coming of age stories are a beloved literary tradition-Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye and Lee's To Kill A Mockingbird, frequently appearing on lists of the most influential American literature, are stories of young people struggling to understand themselves and their place in the world. The Flamer follows firmly in their footsteps. -The Review Lab Oby's thought process fits so well with teenage mentality that I wonder how Ben Rogers did it....I really grew to love this boy. He's beyond stereotype or easy labeling, and I never knew where he was going; I eagerly followed his unconventional aspirations. -JMWW Journal ...addresses the wily, sometimes dangerous nature of early manhood. Rogers gives us a precocious young man with fiery tastes and curious charm. -Don Waters, author of Sunland I liked how Rogers used Reno's streets, the hills west of town, the geography of this place as a character in the novel...When Rogers wants to be subtle, he can. But most of all, I liked the kid. -Reno News & Review Rogers gets the coming-of-age novel right. -The Nevada Review


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