Description
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Review Quotes: "These are exquisite short stories. They disturb, delight, and linger long after finishing." --Louise Kennedy, author of Trespasses "Ruskovich blends urgent pacing with lush wooded scenery and intimate psychological details. It's a marvel." --Publishers Weekly, starred review "In this exquisitely tailored collection of five stories, Ruskovich plumbs the depths of mystery, memory, and the quiet grief of intimacy. . . . Like Idaho, this book has a compelling slipperiness, both in time and reality. Ruskovich's characters are often in two places in time at once, and she expertly weaves memory and observation to fuse the past and present together. . . . A portal to a haunting, liminal Pacific Northwest." --Kirkus Reviews, starred review Praise for Emily Ruskovich "You know you're in masterly hands here . . . . Wrenching and beautiful." --The New York Times Book Review "Sensuous, exquisitely crafted." --The Wall Street Journal "Riveting . . . exquisitely rendered with masterful language and imagery . . . powerful and deeply moving." --The Washington Post "Shatteringly original . . . upturns everything you think you know about story. . . . You could read Idaho just for the sheer beauty of the prose, the expert way Ruskovich makes everything strange and yet absolutely familiar. . . . She startles with images so fresh, they make you see the world anew." --San Francisco Chronicle "Ruskovich's prose is immensely seductive." --The Boston Globe "Haunting, propulsive and gorgeously written." --People Biographical Note: Emily Ruskovich is the author of the bestselling novel Idaho, which won the International Dublin Literary Award, only the fourth American novel ever to do so. Ruskovich is also the recipient of the Pacific Northwest Book Award and an O. Henry Prize. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Paris Review, The Guardian, One Story, Zoetrope, The Virginia Quarterly Review, and elsewhere. She grew up in the Idaho panhandle, and lives now in the mountains of western Montana with her husband and their three young children. Nightjar is her second book. Publisher Marketing: From the award-winning author of the national bestseller Idaho comes a "stunning collection" (Harper's Bazaar) of stories that explore how unexpected intuitions forever alter the lives of ordinary people. "These are marvelous and unsettling stories."--Kelly Link, author of The Book of Love "In clear and distinctive prose, Emily Ruskovich evokes the epic scope of quiet lives."--Paula Hawkins, author of A Slow Fire Burning Five years after moving into the isolated house in rural Oregon where her husband lived as a child, the protagonist of "Victor's Room" begins to doubt her husband's account of his family's past. In "Round Lake," a young woman's plans to meet a lover in Tokyo are upended when she learns a startling truth about her mother's death. In "Owl," winner of an O. Henry Award, a fur trapper reckons with the dreadful origins of his marriage after his wife is brutally injured by four adolescent boys. Haunting and psychologically provocative, and set against the vivid backdrop of the Pacific Northwest, Nightjar illuminates the secret, instinctive knowledge that lies just under the surface of our awareness. Review Citations:
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Nightjar: Stories
$34.80
