"The Last Eucharist" has as its beginning an image of a man, both legs amputated just below the knee, doing a headstand on the sidewalk outside of a cinema.
Looking at the world through satirical eyes, this book shines a bright light on human foibles. And author Ian T. King's sarcastic humor makes unusual sense out of a chaotic world in the same vein as satirists such as George Saunders and Joseph Heller.
Navigating the line between illusion and reality, the plot flows from the scene at the Palais de Theatre in Jackrabbit, Arizona, toward a chance meeting between Thomas, the...
"The Last Eucharist" has as its beginning an image of a man, both legs amputated just below the knee, doing a headstand on the sidewalk outside of ...