Day of the Dragonfly is an epic story of the struggle against poverty. Beginning in rural Brazil during the Great Depression this Odyssey ends in...

Day of the Dragonfly by David Vogel
David Vogel

David Vogel

Shortly before his fifth birthday, David Vogel announced he wanted violin lessons. When his father insisted violins were too expensive, David went knocking on doors and came home with the loan of a half-size violin. Growing up, it was assumed he would become an artist of some sort while his older brother would be a scientist. David was not the better student of the two. When he graduated from high school, the principal called his parents in for a conference and informed them that it would be a waste of David's time and their money to send him to college. But in college, he and his brother switched places. His brother became an actor while David earned a PhD in biophysics (but with a subspecialty in eccentricity).Most of Dr Vogel's writing has been educational, and almost all of it (including an introductory physics textbook) has been humorous. (His research papers on neural network models of higher cognitive processes are not at all amusing, but at least he almost failed his thesis defense when the conservative academic from a country with a certain national stereotype took issue with his amusing style - not appropriate in scientific writing).Facing retirement, Dr Vogel has taken the opportunity to begin writing fiction. (Well, the physics problems about his Chrysler powered Smart Car were already fiction.) Day of the Dragonfly is the first novel he has let out of his hands, and it is the first that is not humorous. "It was an unexpected book that came chasing after me while I was sitting with my wife on a long, hot, tropical day in Brazil. It didn't have a single joke in it, but it insisted on being written. It seemed to write itself. Unfortunately, it wouldn't stop writing itself, and when it went past three hundred thousand words, it had to be hacked back like an acre of kudzu."David Vogel presently resides in Hull, Georgia. He's easy to find. Hull is just one vowel from Hell. The serous tone and formal style of the new book have not stopped him from doing stand-up comedy.

Praise

Oh, the ending! – Since the dawn of the Western literary tradition the theme of the journey has enthralled listeners and readers. Now David Vogel invigorates the prose odyssey with his novel the Day of the Dragonfly. In Vogel’s prose the odyssey returns to its more traditional form at least regarding scope of time and geography, but his tale is immediately relevant to our contemporary reality. Told in three parts, the Day of the Dragonfly takes the reader, via the lives of three generations, from the drought famine of Depression era northeastern Brazil, through the Caribbean, on to Miami and parts north, telling a harrowing story of a family’s determination, from one person to another, to stave off starvation – often just long enough to live another single day – in order to have the physical energy to take a few more steps towards freedom: freedom from poverty, disease, and abuse both familial and cultural.
Seen in one light the Day of the Dragonfly can appear dystopian but David Vogel manages to create a gripping story that unites two values that rarely sit easily side-by-side: humanistic compassion and cold harsh skepticism. He delivers readers a rare but wonderful treat – a novel that is not only very humane but also ennobling.

– The Autodidact

What really held my interest was that the struggles and conflicts of the protagonist family really ring true. The problems the characters face, and the way they think about them are relatable, and at the same time give me a vivid sense of a life that is very different from mine. It takes the lives of impoverished immigrants, and gives their stories a kind of epic, heroic feel. I found myself really invested in the characters, cheering for them when they succeed, gritting my teeth when they take a wrong turn. It also has a flow and a structure that is quite different, and makes it much less predictable than most of the novels I read.

– Darius Wrona

This book, Day of the Dragonfly, tells the story about the struggle against poverty with power and grace. It is a great storytelling, and human characters create very interesting jo urney across continents and time. Moving and provoking your thoughts this book takes you on a journey that you have not experienced ever.

– Amazon Verified Purchase