The Bottom of the Sky

ForeWord, July-August, 2009 by Marlene Satter

Work Title: The Bottom of the Sky

Work Author(s): William C. Pack

Riverbend Publishing

Hardcover $24.95 (476pp)

Literary

ISBN: 9781606390030

Reviewer: Marlene Satter

The corrupting influence of big money is just one dark force at work in this story of an abused brother and sister and their futile attempts to rise above their pasts.Levi Monroe and his sister Lam have known beatings and worse at the hands of their father. Lam was sexually abused on a regular basis and has become a magnet for rape and seduction. Their mother, Virginia, put them through another kind of hell with her cancer and inability to deal with her husbands behavior. Poverty has dealt yet another blow, overlaying Levis troubled mind with humiliation. He seeks to rise above and leave behind everything hes ever known, abandoning his family and hometown of Roundup, Montana, in search of prosperity and respect. When he becomes the youngest broker at the Billings branch of Bookman Stuart, he discovers that his background clings to him like a shadow, predisposing those with moneyed roots to look down on him-men such as Gary Crawford, who recommends against his hire and becomes his adversary.This is a well-told story of decay and doom. The prose is polished and smooth and the characters introspective. The timeline, however, can be confusing, with some events tied to decades in which they did not occur. But both the Montana background and the details of the financial industry are exhaustive and reflective of the authors birthplace and his career in the brokerage industry. The overwhelming aura of tragedy and the futility of the characters struggles make this story a painful if gripping read. Levis integrity in the face of Crawfords corruption, and his "hunches" that allow him to sense stock market behavior and preserve his clients assets, only seem to bring him more trouble. The infidelity to his childhood sweetheart Angela, and his inability to leave the office behind as he works himself right out of their marriage, contribute to the gloom. Levis successes-in fact, all of the characters successes-go for naught in the end as the patterns of the past refuse to die. (June)

COPYRIGHT 2009 ForeWord
COPYRIGHT 2009 Gale, Cengage Learning
 
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    Sublime Lit

    06/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Bottom of the Sky

    It has been a long time sinc I have read such raw and beautiful writing about such fundamental subjects - primarily the abuse of power. There is so much said here that needs to be said, and Pack does it with unpretentious vividness. What is more important - the family or the individuals in it? Which would you save if one might kill the other? It's high time someone spoke plainly and eloquently about the lifelong reverberation from abuse of children, the abuse of women, the abuse of corporat power. Bravo, to William Pack. Superb!

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    2

    Sublime Lit

    06/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Bottom of the Sky

    One must wonder if this reveiwer read the book or skimmed it. Did she finished the book? Did she read the same one I bought last week? Surely she either failed to read or paid no attention to the ending. It wasn't exectly obscure. All the main characters indeed escaped the patterns of the past, and in the most dramatic of fashions. It is gripping, like she said, and very well written. Perhaps the fact that she writes makes her living selling articles for Wall Street publications affected her viewpoint. At any rate, this book is a must, if you want ot know what truly goes on on the Street.

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