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A Thousand Miles Out of My Mind
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A Thousand Miles Out of My Mind in Franklin, TN
Current price: $20.95

Barnes and Noble
A Thousand Miles Out of My Mind in Franklin, TN
Current price: $20.95
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Size: OS
Styled after classic American road novels, Grant Sisk's
A Thousand Miles Out of My Mind
reads like a cross between Charles Portis's
Norwood
and Hunter S. Thompson's
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
. A high-torque comic journey written with terrific verve, it features a cast of outcasts from the lonelier parts of the Greater Southwest and mile after mile of metaphorical asphalt. As with the best of its predecessors, the true subject of Sisk's novel is America itself.
--Nick Norwood, Director of the Carson McCullers Center
for Writers and Musicians
A Thousand Miles Out of My Mind
reads like a cross between Charles Portis's
Norwood
and Hunter S. Thompson's
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
. A high-torque comic journey written with terrific verve, it features a cast of outcasts from the lonelier parts of the Greater Southwest and mile after mile of metaphorical asphalt. As with the best of its predecessors, the true subject of Sisk's novel is America itself.
--Nick Norwood, Director of the Carson McCullers Center
for Writers and Musicians
Styled after classic American road novels, Grant Sisk's
A Thousand Miles Out of My Mind
reads like a cross between Charles Portis's
Norwood
and Hunter S. Thompson's
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
. A high-torque comic journey written with terrific verve, it features a cast of outcasts from the lonelier parts of the Greater Southwest and mile after mile of metaphorical asphalt. As with the best of its predecessors, the true subject of Sisk's novel is America itself.
--Nick Norwood, Director of the Carson McCullers Center
for Writers and Musicians
A Thousand Miles Out of My Mind
reads like a cross between Charles Portis's
Norwood
and Hunter S. Thompson's
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
. A high-torque comic journey written with terrific verve, it features a cast of outcasts from the lonelier parts of the Greater Southwest and mile after mile of metaphorical asphalt. As with the best of its predecessors, the true subject of Sisk's novel is America itself.
--Nick Norwood, Director of the Carson McCullers Center
for Writers and Musicians