<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>The outrageous bestseller that stars Sissy Hankshaw--flawlessly beautiful, almost. A small-town girl with big-time dreams and a quirk to match--hitchhiking her way into your heart, your hopes, and your sleeping bag. . . . Follow Sissy's amazing odyssey from Virginia to Manhattan to the Dakota Badlands, where FBI agents, cowgirls and ecstatic whooping cranes explode in a deliciously drawn-out climax.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>"This is one of those special novels--a piece of working magic, warm, funny, and sane."--Thomas Pynchon</b> <p/>The whooping crane rustlers are girls. Young girls. Cowgirls, as a matter of fact, all "bursting with dimples and hormones"--and the FBI has never seen anything quite like them. Yet their rebellion at the Rubber Rose Ranch is almost overshadowed by the arrival of the legendary Sissy Hankshaw, a white-trash goddess literally born to hitchhike, and the freest female of them all. <p/>Freedom, its prizes and its prices, is a major theme of Tom Robbins's classic tale of eccentric adventure. As his robust characters attempt to turn the tables on fate, the reader is drawn along on a tragicomic joyride across the badlands of sexuality, wild rivers of language, and the frontiers of the mind.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"This is one of those special novels--a piece of working magic, warm, funny, and sane--that you just want to ride off into the sunset with."<b>-Thomas Pynchon</b> <p/>"The best fiction, so far, to come out of the American counterculture."<b>--</b><i><b>Chicago Tribune Book World</b> <p/></i>"<i>Even Cowgirls Get the Blues </i>comes as a magical gift, a brilliant affirmation of private visions and private wishes and their power to transform life and death."<b>--</b><i><b>The Nation</b> <p/></i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Tom Robbins has been called "a vital natural resource" by <i>The Oregonian</i>, "one of the wildest and most entertaining novelists in the world" by the <i>Financial Times</i> of London, and "the most dangerous writer in the world today" by Fernanda Pivano of Italy's Corriere della Sera. A Southerner by birth, Robbins has lived in and around Seattle since 1962.
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