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The Man Who Fell In Love With The Moon
The Man Who Fell In Love With The Moon
Jul 15, 2025 6:08 PM

Author:Tom Spanbauer

The Man Who Fell In Love With The Moon

The cult gay classic of the early 1990s, reissued to mark the year of the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall riots

Between nights, earning his keep at Excellent, Idaho's outrageously pink whorehouse, Shed or, Duivichi-un-Dua - lives a life of drinking, talking and smoking opium stardust with his eccentric family. But soon, he will leave this tiny turn-of-the-century town in search of the true meaning of his Shoshone name - and in search of himself.

Along the way Shed will fall in love with the philosophical, green-eyed, half-crazy cowboy Dellwood Barker, a man who talks to the moon, on a journey that will lead Shed to enlightenment and understanding of man's relationship to himself and the natural world.

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY ANDREW McMILLAN, AUTHOR OF PHYSICAL

'A brilliant novel... Flawlessly authentic, beautifully captured' Observer

Reviews

A brilliant novel... Flawlessly authentic, beautifully captured

—— Observer

Haunting and earthy, a deeply felt tale of love and loss... Tom Spanbauer's wild west is the hurly burly of the mind. He takes us into territories where few of us would ever dare to go

—— Publishers Weekly

This brave, original, ribald, funny, heartrending fable about the Old West . . . is a book as bright as it is dark, full of fictional and philosophical pleasures, a quirky, unsettling look at American history and a vision quest in the grand old tradition

—— Los Angeles Times Book Review

The miracle of the novel is that it obliges us to rethink our whole idea of narration and history and myth. . . . Spanbauer captures the music of the mind and the body

—— New York Times Book Review

Timely and irresistibly unpleasantsure to provoke passionate discussion… [Afternoon of a Faun] lingers after you have closed the book with a vividness that testifies to the compact virtues of the novella.

—— Marcel Theroux , Guardian

[James Lasdun’s] electric new book… is absorbing… [it] constantly pulls the rug from under your feet.

—— Anthony Cummins , Daily Mail

Afternoon of a Faun is a brilliantly imagined, devastatingly insightful and powerfully rendered novel of sexual exploitation and betrayal. Like all of James Lasdun’s work, it is meticulously written and intelligent, both a novel of ideas and a cautionary tale for the #MeToo era. Its ending is bitterly ironic, or perhaps just darkly funny, depending upon one’s perspective – and Afternoon of a Faun is about the very drama of “perspective”.

—— Joyce Carol Oates

In an era of sexual reckonings and “defunct male prerogatives”, any decades-old fling is a ticking time bomb an ambivalent ex can choose to detonate at whim. Yet who’s to say what actually happened? Afternoon of a Faun is an exquisitely rendered tale of moral arithmetic, erotic murkiness, and men’s fascination with other men’s scorecards. It’s also Lasdun at his most pleasurably diabolical.

—— Laura Kipnis

[Victory] comprises two mesmeric impressive stories, containing beautiful descriptions and subtle twists.

—— Sunday Times, *Best Literary Novels of 2019*

Darkly humorous and compelling portraits of men wrestling with guilt and desire… [Afternoon of a Faun] feels very much a novel for our times.

—— Alex Preston , Guardian

Fascinating about the warped thought processes that often underpin male duplicity.

—— William Skidelsky , Financial Times

Feathered Glory confirms Lasdun as one of the great serio-comic writers of the age. The writing, alternately poetic and razor-sharp cynical, absorbs from start to finish.

—— Ian Thomson , Tablet, Novel of the Week

From book to book, James Lasdun gets more and more interesting.

—— Bookmunch, 50 Books We're Looking Forward to in 2019

Two stunningly well-written novellas… these stories are timeless in their humorous, melancholy view of the pitfalls of love.

—— Anne Chisholm , Tablet, *Summer reads of 2019*

Fairy tale lovers, if you’re going to read one fantasy book this winter, let this be it.... beautiful debut

—— www.bookish.com

An enchanting yet haunting Russian fairytale which inspires courage in a time of darkness

—— The Observer

Katherine Arden's Winternight Trilogy isn't just good - it's hug-to-your-chest, straight-to-the-favourites-shelf, reread-immediately good, and each book just gets better

—— Laini Taylor

A historical fantasy perfect for those who love ancient stories and tradition

—— Good Housekeeping

A modern gothic thriller that draws on the author's own Highland childhood

—— Herald Magazine

With Pine, (Toon) … has passed the debut hurdle in striking style.

—— Harper's Bazaar

A haunting and heartbreakingly bewitching tale … Packed with folklore, magic and an eerie sense of foreboding every time you turn the page, Pine will captivate readers from the very first page

—— Her.ie

A gothic stirring of folklore and legend

—— RTÉ Guide

Eerie and spell-binding

—— Irish Examiner

From the first page PINE casts a sense of slowly-rising unease that is completely compelling. It's both eerie and thrilling at once, and had me under its spell until the end

—— Sophie Mackintosh, author of THE WATER CURE

An atmospheric tale of memory and loss

—— Daily Mirror

Eerie and dark, you'll be mesmerised by this dramatic tale with its tightly-woven plot

—— Woman

If there's any doubt that the Gothic thriller is enjoying a boom, Francine Toon's debut should settle the matter. PINE, a moving study of memory and loss, is both spooky and tender; drenched in a sense of place and yet eerily timeless

—— Mick Herron

Combines the Gothic sensibilities of Shirley Jackson with the psychologically astute suspense of Gillian Flynn ... will leave you gripped and transfixed

—— Sharlene Teo, author of Ponti

Francine Toon's touching account of a flawed, yet tender, father-daughter relationship in PINE is all the more compelling against the starkly beautiful backdrop of the Scottish highlands

—— Livia Franchini, author of Shelf Life

A beautifully crafted gothic tale of isolation and not belonging. Thoroughly gripping and stunningly atmospheric

—— Lucie McKnight Hardy, author of Water Shall Refuse Them

An atmospheric tale of memory and loss, movingly told through a child's eyes

—— Sunday Express Magazine

Many of the themes familiar from Austen’s novels are deftly revisited by Hornby, and the letters that are reimagined are pitch-perfect, with deeply touching confidences shared in family correspondences. You can tell this book by its cover – it’s quite lovely.

—— IRISH TIMES

Beautiful novel[…] light hearted historical fiction which resembles Austen’s novels, a really lovely read very suitable for incoming spring

—— Excuse My Reading (Instagram)

Gill Hornby unfolds it all in her imagination.

—— The Times

Hornby combines a moving portrait of sisterly devotion with a comic depiction of the provincial life so brilliantly evoked in Austen's own novels

—— DAILY MAIL

[A]t the heart of it all there's a romantic twist..."Hornby is at her best describing the complex bonds between the excellent women of her story. She describes the horrors, but also the pleasures of spinsterhood"

—— THE TIMES
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