There are two themes to Radiomen. First, if there are aliens interacting with our world, they are likely just as confused about who or what God is as human beings are; and second, whoever they are, they're probably just as fond of dogs as we are.
Laurie, a woman who works at a bar at Kennedy airport, doesn't remember that when she was a child, she met an alien on the fire escape of a building where her uncle kept a shortwave radio. The radio is part of a universal network of repeaters maintained by an unknown alien race; they use the network to broadcast prayers into the universe. She meets a psychic who is actually part of a Scientology-like cult called the Blue Awareness, as well as a late-night radio host. All have their own reasons for unraveling the mystery of the lost radio network. Laurie is given a strange dog by her neighbor, an immigrant and a member of the Dogon tribe—people who believe they were visited by aliens long ago and repeat a myth about how the aliens brought doglike animals with them. All Dogon dogs are supposedly descended from that animal.
As conflict develops between the Blue Awareness leader and the other characters, the Dogon act as an intermediary between the humans, who want to understand why the aliens need the radio network, and the aliens who need the humans to help them find a lost element of the universal network.
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“This novel has an inspiring premise and aneven better plot. It’s a hybrid between conventional novel and science fiction.At the end of any good book what readers ask themselves is, ‘What did it allmean?’ and, more importantly, ‘What does it mean to my life?’ These arequestions that Radiomen asks inmultiple ways.”
— New York Journal of Books
“Poet Lerman’s second novel, after Janet Planet, is both a sharp send-up of Scientology and an intriguing aliens-among-us tale.”
— BooklistBe the first to write a review about this audiobook!
Eleanor Lerman is a National Book Award finalist. She was awarded the 2006 Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize from the Academy of American Poets and the Nation magazine and received a 2007 Poetry Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. In 2011 she received a Guggenheim Fellowship. Her first novel, Janet Planet, based on the life of Carlos Castaneda, was published in 2011. Her latest collection of poetry, Strange Life, was published in 2014. She lives in New York.
Dawn Harvey has been performing for as long as she has been able to walk and talk and sing. She was already a stage and film actress when she began her voice-over career and now is an AudioFile Earphones Award–winning narrator.