Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
Sculpting Fire: A Poetic Journey Into Blasphemy at the Turn of the 21st Century is a fragmented, sometimes chaotic look into life that most people today have never experienced and few could ever fully understand. Written during an isolated and harsh existence, this book is a hammer of reality that not only happened to Keith, but still happens to a surprising number of people in impoverished areas. It depicts a largely ignored demographic in America: the poor rural youths who never had a chance to dream of a quiet life, pension, or a pile of grandbabies. Keith will be the first to admit that he never dreamed of living to see his thirtieth birthday. It is a glimpse at a world where you know, almost from birth, that the deck is stacked against you. It is about what happens when you make a few poor choices in a small town, politically corrupt town. And perhaps most importantly, this book is an example of how words can become a conduit for escape in the midst of sheer madness. Stylistic choices have been left mostly intact from the original journals. I encourage you to read closely, as each word and phrase was a very deliberate decision. It will reveal some scary truths and harsh realities about addiction, prison, and the path that leads an individual to these places. If you are a person who bets against the odds then please enjoy, because this is a book that never should have been completed. Yet it was.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Sculpting Fire: A Poetic Journey Into Blasphemy at the Turn of the 21st Century is a fragmented, sometimes chaotic look into life that most people today have never experienced and few could ever fully understand. Written during an isolated and harsh existence, this book is a hammer of reality that not only happened to Keith, but still happens to a surprising number of people in impoverished areas. It depicts a largely ignored demographic in America: the poor rural youths who never had a chance to dream of a quiet life, pension, or a pile of grandbabies. Keith will be the first to admit that he never dreamed of living to see his thirtieth birthday. It is a glimpse at a world where you know, almost from birth, that the deck is stacked against you. It is about what happens when you make a few poor choices in a small town, politically corrupt town. And perhaps most importantly, this book is an example of how words can become a conduit for escape in the midst of sheer madness. Stylistic choices have been left mostly intact from the original journals. I encourage you to read closely, as each word and phrase was a very deliberate decision. It will reveal some scary truths and harsh realities about addiction, prison, and the path that leads an individual to these places. If you are a person who bets against the odds then please enjoy, because this is a book that never should have been completed. Yet it was.