Leonora
(Leo) is an Italian/Asian/American teen-ager with a rotten attitude
and a genius I.Q. Thrown out of twelve schools and fluent in as
many languages, she's sent to live with her grandmother in the
Philippines, where she spends all her time in a computer environment
called Apeiron - a parasitic virtual reality program which drove
its mad creator to dive headlong into a gorge. Only in Apeiron
can Leo shed the awkward body of an adolescent girl and emerge
in the persona of Fergus, the warrior; only in Apeiron can she
hobnob with Socrates and John Lennon. But one day the only boy
she's ever liked disappears, and Leo, in a quest to rescue him,
finds herself lured into the program's computer generated hell.
A post-modern tilt at Alice in Wonderland, a computer-age Huckleberry
Finn, leo@fergusrules.com is above all the story of a young woman's
search for the lost world of her ancestors in a society in which
technology has replaced community.
"Leo @ fergusrulesrules.com is a fantastical coming of age
story about a brainy, racially mixed teenage girl…who spends
much of her spare time in her bedroom, jacked into a cyber wonderland
called Apeiron. This computer-generated 3-D world is a timeless
landscape, home to a historical line-up of digitally re-created
dignitaries, such as Confucius, Julius Caesar and Napoleon…
She also encounters relatives and ancestors, including her great
aunt, who as a young woman survives being shot by American soldiers
in the Philippine American War. Other dangers include pterodactyls
with giant Barbie-doll bodies that dump guano and screech, 'Nike,
Guess, Benetton, Levi's! Tommy, Tommy, Tommy-boy!" and a
child-steamrollering Zamboni that is operated by gnomelike people
and has a control room guarded by a three-headed dog. Needless
to say, Leo is a trip…a 21st century homage to the works
of Argentine poet and author Jorge Luis Borges and to other classics,
such as Alice in Wonderland, The Odyssey and Dante's Inferno."
— USA Today
"Tangherlini succeeds wonderfully with his postmodern coming-of-age
story. leo@fergusrules.com pays enormous tribute to Dante's Inferno,
but Tangherlini has created his own unique and sophisticated masterpiece."
- Library Journal
"Remarkably inventive. In a posthumous first novel, Arne
Tangherlini reveals a playful intellect worthy of Umberto Eco
and Lewis Carroll. leo@fergusrules.com will probably be compared
to another first - and last - novel, John Kennedy Toole's Confederacy
of the Dunces... but leo@fergusrules.com is more fun...A literary
construct, a fiction within a fiction inspired by Jorge Luis Borges...a
pleasure."
- Book Magazine
"Alice in Cyberland! With uncommon energy and sophistication,
Arne Tangherlini's LEO deploys a fantastical vehicle to speak
movingly of its young heroine's difficult coming of age. A brilliant
and engaging first novel."
- John Barth
"I wasn't in store for such a good book. If ever a writer's
reputation can be established just with one published work, this
one's it. In a nutshell it's one helluva novel: vibrant, vital,
energetic, polished, quick, funny, rich, imaginative, sad and
powerful and original. It's also something most first novels aren't:
deeply intelligent, eminently readable, highly exotic, and practically
flawless."
- Stephen Dixon
"Leo@fergusrules.com reminds me of the novels I loved as
a kid, Narnia, Alice, Phantom Tollbooth - books that are secret
gardens, with pages that whisper of other worlds. And yet, because
of its literary allusions (Borges, Eco, Dante et. al.) and challenging
ideas, it definitely belongs in the adult section. The narrator,
a hormone-addled teen girl, dons a virtual-reality visor and goes
off on a heroic journey that would make Joseph Campbell's head
spin. On the way, she encounters mythological beasts from her
Philippine grandmother's stories, a gaggle of mall rats, and a
Zamboni ice-cleaner that's a portal to another dimension. Leo@fergusrules.com
is a bit like a virtual-reality visor itself - disorienting, new,
and utterly diverting.
- Pagan Kennedy
"An engagingly suggestive, and sometimes entrancing exploration
of what it means to grow up today amidst technological changes
that become, finally, instruments of psychological turmoil and
growth."
- Robert Coles
About the Author:
Arne Tangherlini received his A.B. in History and Literature
from Harvard and his M.A. from the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins
University. He was a teacher for many years both in the Philippines
and the United States and the co-author of Smart Kids: How Academic
Talents are Nurtured and Developed in America.
Also available as a Rocket e-book
ISBN 0-9654578-0-X
FICTION
$14.95 Paperback Original
ISBN: 0-9654578-7-7
216 Pages / 5 x 7 3/4
Back to Leapfrog Titles