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The Losers

The Losers cover
Author David Eddings
Cover Artist 
CountryUnited States
Language English
Genre(s)Philosophical
PublisherDel Rey Books
Publication dateAugust 4, 1993
Pages 295 (paperback)
ISBNISBN 0345385209
Losers

Young Raphael Taylor had it all: handsome, charming, a gifted athlete and serious student--until he becomes entangled with cynical, affable, devious Damon Flood, a fellow student with some sort of secret agenda.

Damon introduces Raphael to the seductive Isabel, an older woman who comes dangerously close to consuming Raphael utterly--until Raphael perceives his peril, tries to extricate himself by getting aggressively drunk, and winds up the victim of a horrible accident: he loses his leg and his manhood.

Later, trying to shake flee of the smothering social-workers whom Raphael regards as little better than parasites, he finds himself in a rooftop apartment in a seedy back-street in Spokane, from where he observes the wretched lives of his neighbors: the alcoholics, petty criminals, obsessives, and welfare defendants he calls the "losers." And, still bedeviled by them himself, Raphael continues to blame the social-workers for perpetuating the entire miserable sequence.

He finds a job and becomes friendly with fellow worker Denise, a beautiful woman with a withered arm. Then Flood shown up, pretending amicability but seemingly intent on Raphael's destruction. Yet, gradually, despite himself, Flood begins to identify with the losers and to adopt their lifestyle, falling in with a blustering, second-rate biker gang; and when the gang goes to war with a rival gang, Hood, now packing a pistol, self-destructs. Only then does Raphael, rehabilitated at last, commit himself to Denise and unravel the bizarre impulses behind Flood's need to destroy Raphael. 

Interpretation[]

Eddings himself identifies the novel as an allegory, with the One-Eyed Indian representing God, and Jake Flood as the Devil.

Given the novel was written just a few years after both David and Leigh Eddings served jail time for child abuse, and had their two children taken from them, it is easy to imagine these might be connected to the distaste for social services evidenced in the novel.



"Everybody falls now and then," Patch said in his soft voice. "It's not just you. The important thing is not to let it throw you, make you afraid."

Covers[]

LosersCover2 LosersCov3LosersFrench

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