Cassada FROM OUR EDITORS
If ever there was a writer's writer, it's James Salter, author of A Sport and a Pastime, a masterpiece of 20th-century American fiction. In writing Cassada, Salter chose to revisit his second book, The Arm of Flesh, first published in 1961 and, as he writes in his introduction, "largely a failure." One often wonders how great writers view their early literary efforts, and how, with age and experience, they might have transformed those experiments into art. With Cassada Salter has successfully re-created "the book the other might have been."
--Cary Goldstein
FROM THE PUBLISHER
James Salter revisits his second novel, The Arm of Flesh, making extensive changes and rewriting many portions entirely. The resulting workCassadacombines the untamed vision of a young military pilot with the clarity and power of a masterful writer.
James Salter is one of America's greatest prose stylists. His first two novels, The Hunters and The Arm of Flesh, are legendary in military circles for their descriptions of aerial combat. A former Air Force pilot who flew F-86 fighters in Korea, Salter writes with matchless insight about the terror and exhilaration of a pilot in wartime.
The lives of officers in an Air Force squadron in occupied Europe encompass the contradictions of military experience and the men's response to a young newcomer, bright and ambitious, whose fate is to be an emblem of their own. In Cassada, Salter captures the strange comradeship of loneliness, trust, and alienation among military men ready to sacrifice all in the name of duty and pride.
One of Americaᄑs greatest prose stylists, James Salter is often praised by literary readers for the clear, shimmering surface of his writing. His first two novels, The Hunters and The Arm of Flesh, are also known in military circles, where his descriptions of flying and combat are legendary. A former Air Force pilot who flew F-86 fighters in Korea, Salter writes with matchless insight about the terror and exhilaration that accompany a pilot in wartime.
In returning to The Arm of Flesh forty years after writing it, Salter has identified structural weaknesses that have caused him to reconsider his second novel altogether. He is now engaged in a complete reworking of the narrative, an all-but-new novel entitled Cassada. The lives of officers in an Air Force squadron in occupied EuropeCaptains Isbell and Wickenden, Lieutenants Sisse, Godchaux, Grace, and othersencompass the contradictions of military experience and in particular the response to a young newcomer, bright and ambitious, whose fate is to be an emblem of their own. In Cassada, Salter captures a strange comradeship of loneliness, trust, and alienation among military men ready to sacrifice all in the name of duty and pride.
FROM THE CRITICS
Paul West
That opening image of the two lost planes lingers throughout, evoking the dark, perilous stuff that aviators and pilot-scribes, from Saint-Exupᄑry and Richard Hillary to Hanna Reitsch, work in.
Richard Bernstein
A small gem, a lean, sinewy book that evokes a full and complex world of bitterness, striving and recklessness..... His final sentence leaves the reader stunned, brooding over the heart-wrenching futility of things, and that is a measure of the quiet power of this wonderful little book.
Mark Levine
The air is thin in the heights through which Salter steers his characters, the prose moves at breakneck speed, and the book's emotional impact is devastating.ᄑ Cassada is a masterpiece, a book in which men wage an elemental battle for survival against invisible forces.
Gail Caldwell
A beautiful stylist, he handles words as though they were fine marble: all angles and chiseled perfection, in search of the ideal form.... Cassada turns out to be a small flame that burns pure.
Benjamin Kunkel
The grace and brutality of his writing make him one of our best and most central novelists. With Cassada, Salter becomes the author of four very good novels, two of them, Light Years and A Sport and a Pastime, among our best postwar novels. At seventy-five, he is due a sort of festschrift, testimonial to the admiration he and his characters have coveted, and so richly deserve.
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