| A Review of: A Love Supreme by W.P. KinsellaA Love Supreme might in another era have been called an existential
novel. The term describing the works of Camus, Beckett, Sartre and
others seems to have fallen by the wayside. Here we have a youngish
man (about 40 years of age) named Omar Snow who is writing a
nonfiction book about jazz legends Monk, Mingus and Coltrane. He
has sold his car and computer so he can hole up in a room and write
his book on a typewriter, which is certainly fantasy if not science
fiction. He is introduced to a neighbor, an attractive actress
pushing 40, who is flighty and drinks too much. They have occasional
dates but nothing develops between them. In fact nothing much
develops anywhere. At the end Snow's book is still unfinished, his
personal life a zero, but he's giving a great deal of thought to
life, love and existence in general. Capably written, but just not
very interesting.
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