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* Download PDF The Caveman's Valentine, by George Dawes Green

Download PDF The Caveman's Valentine, by George Dawes Green

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The Caveman's Valentine, by George Dawes Green

The Caveman's Valentine, by George Dawes Green



The Caveman's Valentine, by George Dawes Green

Download PDF The Caveman's Valentine, by George Dawes Green

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The Caveman's Valentine, by George Dawes Green

Romulus Ledbetter wasn't always homeless. He once was a devoted husband, father, and musician with a bright future. He now forages for food in the trash cans of the city's better neighborhoods and wages a strenuous one-man war against Cornelius Gould Stuyvesant, an evil -- and imaginary -- power broker who is responsible for society's ills, as well as the sinister Y- and Z-rays that are corrupting humankind. Then one wintry night, Rom finds a corpse at the mouth of his cave that rouses his well-defined sense of ethics and launches him on an obsessive quest for answers. Forced to reconnect with society, Rom leaves his world and journeys through a spiraling web of clues and hunches, straight into a sinister den of money, temptation, and murder--otherwise known as the "civilized" world.

  • Sales Rank: #1655526 in Books
  • Published on: 1995-02-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x 1.00" w x 5.25" l, .64 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 323 pages

From Publishers Weekly
In this remarkable first novel, the caveman is Romulus Ledbetter, a Juilliard graduate, husband and father, former mental patient and current resident of a cave in Manhattan's Inwood Park. His valentine is the naked body of Scotty Gales, a homeless former photographer's model. The police say Gales simply froze to death, but Romulus knows that he was killed by agents of the evil Cornelius Gould Stuyvesant, who rules the world from his offices in the Chrysler Building. Sometimes aided--and sometimes humored--by everyone from his daughter Lulu (a police officer) to people he meets on the street, Romulus tracks Scotty's murderer, doggedly following his twisted vision of reality into a world of money and violence where things and people are never what they seem. Although Green's plotting is solid, the narrative draws its power from the superbly realized protagonist. Romulus is that rarity, a truly original character whose fits and rantings retain a dangerous edge and never become lovable tics. Green makes a wonderful debut with this gripping, well-written portrait of modern dislocation and homelessness--although Romulus would object to the latter term: he has a home; it just happens to be in a cave.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Romulus Ledbetter has seen better times. Once a gifted Juilliard student of jazz piano, he fell in love, married, and fathered a daughter who grew up to be a New York City cop. At some point, however, Romulus succumbed to the gremlin voices in his mind, dissolved his home life to inhabit a cave in Inwood Park, and was labeled a paranoid schizophrenic. An unlikely character to turn detective, he feels compelled to do so when the corpse of a beautiful, young homeless man named Scotty Gates lands at his front door. Early leads point suspiciously to the affluent art photographer David Leppenraub, who had adopted Scotty as a teenager and used him as his model. The meanderings of the plot collide and coincide with those of Romulus's confused mind, adding complexity and depth to a suspenseful, quirky, and well-written murder mystery. A first novel, this is recommended for mystery/thriller collections.
- Sheila Riley, Smithsonian Inst. Libs., Washington, D.C.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

About the Author
George Dawes Green is a higly acclaimed novelist and poet. He currently divides his time between Georgia and New York.

Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
An extraordinarily original protagonist, a fascinating murder mystery and a well written narrative make for a 5 star read!
By Jana L.Perskie
Romulus Ledbetter is one of the most usual protagonists that I have met in a long while. And I found myself not only intrigued by his complex character but liking him very much.

Rom used to be a brilliant piano student at the Julliard School of Music. He was a wonder on the keyboard and his compositions were extraordinary, according to his peers, professors and other musicians. When his girlfriend, Sheila, got pregnant, he married her and quit school to get a job that paid enough to support his new family. Then he began to manifest unusual behavior, which grew increasingly worse.

He stopped making music, left his beloved daughter and wife, and moved into a cave. That was years ago. Doctors diagnosed him as a "well compensated" paranoid, with, perhaps, some schizophrenic overtones. He is deemed "well compensated" because, although he lives in a shallow cave in New York City's Inwood Park, he is able to take care of himself. He grows his own food during the warmer months and scavenges during the winter. Of course, it helps that his daughter Lulu, a NYPD cop, keeps an eye on him. And, when he is not having "fits," his logic is just fine and his high IQ shines through. He is called "The Caveman" by all who know him or know of him.

Hallucinations, visions of his ex-wife, Sheila, looking as young as she did when they were first married, keep appearing before his eyes. She scolds him and dispenses advice as needed. Lulu visits him, in reality - not another figment of his imagination - and loves her father, who is still as kind and loving to her as he was when she was a little girl.

Rom is convinced that a man by the name of Cornelus Gould Stuyvesant controls the world with Y-rays from the top of the Chrysler Building. He believes that he was brought to Stuyvesant's attention because he is a "free" man! And this curdles Stuyvesant's blood! A "free man busting through to his own divinity, right?" "Ghetto kid making it at Julliard. Making a name for himself? Young composer? Hot, jumping? Getting his notes straight from God." He also believes that his mind is inhabited by moth-like angels.

On an especially cold night on February 14, Rom hears the sound of footsteps outside his cave. Swaddled in various coats and blankets, he leaves his shelter and finds a frozen body. He knows that this is not just another homeless man who froze to death. The person who made the sound of footsteps probably left the body at his front door, he deduces. The frozen corpse couldn't have walked there.

The dead man is handsome, and well-dressed, without a mark on his body, according to the medical examiner. His wallet ID reveals his name, Andrew Scott Gates, an unemployed model. Rom insists that he saw a man in a fancy white coat driving a fancy white car leaving the "crime scene." Rom is determined to find the murderer, even though the police, who ignore his ramblings, determine that the death was caused by accidental hypothermia. But, Romulus found Gates and his sense of justice and responsibility kicks in. Of course, he is convinced that Stuyvesant, or one of his minions, is the killer.

Rom is forced to reconnect with society because of his
investigation. He leaves the narrow confines of his cave and journeys into the wider world, trying to keep his fits at bay. A homeless ex-lover of Scott's tells him that the murder was perpetrated by the famous avant-garde photographer, David Leppenraub. Leppenraub, according to rumor, is into drugs and sadomasochistic behavior. Apparently, Scott was the model Leppenraub used in most of his bizarre photographs. Rom hooks up with a former fellow student and musician who knows Leppenraub, and manages to wangle an invitation to one of the photographer's parties with the understanding that he will play for his supper, so to speak. Of course, he hasn't touched a piano in years.

As the story unfolds, the reader is caught up in a tale of deception, violence, mystery and a man's struggle against his madness.

One of the most fascinating aspects of the novel is viewing the world through Romulus' sometimes deranged, sometimes almost normal mind. The extremely well written narrative is quirky and occasionally humorous. And the characters, especially the protagonist's, are very well developed. I really liked this most original novel and highly recommend it.
Jana Perskie

Ravens
The Juror

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Read this!
By Lewis Billingsley
One of the best books I've ever read: humorous, poignant, good character development, great story.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
The most loveable caveman you'll ever encounter!
By IEatBooks4Breakfast
This was definitely one of the best books I've read in a very long time. I don't even particularly like thrillers, or mysteries, or whatever this was, but that's the thing: this book can't be put into one specific category because there is so much to it! Of course there's the suspense aspect as Romulus Ledbetter is trying to solve the murder case. Yet there's the poignancy of a man trying to survive the dangers of life on the street, not least of which is the invasive tyrant, Stuyvesant, who exists only within his mind. Blanketing it all is a sweet humor--never derisive or condemning--and I chuckled along with the narrator at Rom's antics.

Just as there are separate layers of genre, there are layers of reality within the story. Can we really trust what is revealed to the reader in this quirky third-person omniscient narrative? After all, isn't the protagonist a nut job? He may in fact be crazy, but he is one of the most loveable characters I've ever met. George Dawes Green's stylistic choices may be what set the story apart for me, besides the intricate plot details and exciting pace and setting. It isn't every day that the reader gets to delve into the minds of very minor characters--even the potential criminal's canine!--to come away with a well-rounded, fully explored story.

I instantly bought another copy of the book, since I'm sure I'll be reading this one again. My own well-loved copy has already been passed into the hands of another reader waiting to meet Rom, the loveable caveman.

See all 41 customer reviews...

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