Hal, an Afghan war veteran, begins to hear a voice telling him to go "home"-to a castle, in Scotland. But Hal has never been to Scotland. So whose voice is it? What does it want? And why is it calling Hal "home"? What follows is a surrealist road trip story, part Heart of Darkness and part bipolar Guardians of the Galaxy. In Farsickness, Joshua Mohr spins a picaresque, hallucinatory yarn like only he can, as Hal and the reader journey deep into the human soul."This book is like driving a Ferrari through a funhouse and then smashing through the windshield into another realm of existence. In other words, it's what a book should be." - BEN LOORY, author of Tales of Falling and Flying
Hal, an Afghan war veteran, begins to hear a voice telling him to go "home"-to a castle, in Scotland. But Hal has never been to Scotland. So whose voice is it? What does it want? And why is it calling Hal "home"? What follows is a surrealist road trip story, part Heart of Darkness and part bipolar Guardians of the Galaxy. In Farsickness, Joshua Mohr spins a picaresque, hallucinatory yarn like only he can, as Hal and the reader journey deep into the human soul."This book is like driving a Ferrari through a funhouse and then smashing through the windshield into another realm of existence. In other words, it's what a book should be." - BEN LOORY, author of Tales of Falling and Flying