S.J. Parris
S.J. Parris writes about her inspiration for Heresy, which masterfully blends true events with fiction into a page-turning murder mystery set on the sixteenth-century Oxford University campus.
Adam Haslett
A conversation with Adam Haslett, author of Union Atlantic, a deeply affecting portrait of the modern gilded age, the first decade of the twenty-first century.
Book Summary
Keith Donohues first novel, The Stolen Child, was a national bestseller hailed as captivating (USA Today), luminous and thrilling (Washington Post), and wonderful ... So spare and unsentimental that its impossible not to be moved (Newsweek. His new novel, Angels of Destruction, opens on a winters night, when a young girl appears at the home of Mrs. Margaret Quinn, a widow who lives alone. A decade earlier, she had lost her only child, Erica, who fled with her high school sweetheart to join a radical student group known as the Angels of Destruction. Before Margaret answers the knock in the dark hours, she whispers a prayer and then makes her visitor welcome at the door.
The girl, who claims to be nine years old and an orphan with no place to go, beguiles Margaret, offering some solace, some compensation, for the womans loss. Together, they hatch a plan to pass her off as her newly found granddaughter, Norah Quinn, and enlist Sean Fallon, a classmate and heartbroken boy, to guide her into the school and town.
Their conspiracy is vulnerable not only to those children and neighbors intrigued by Norahs mysterious and magical qualities but by a lone figure shadowing the girl who threatens to reveal the childs true identity and her purpose in Margarets life. Who are these strangers really? And what is their connection to the past, the Angels, and the long-missing daughter?
Angels of Destruction is an unforgettable story of hope and fear, heartache and redemption. The saga of the Quinn family unfolds against an America wracked by change. As it delicately dances on the linebetween the real and the imagined, this mesmerizing new novel confirms Keith Donohues standing as one of our most inspiring and inventive novelists.
Book Reviews:
"Norahs unexplained origins form the enigmatic core of this story ... the novel movingly illustrates the quest for connection hardwired into every human heart."
Publishers Weekly.
"Donohue has a talent for using small details to draw his characters, and the result is a dark and unsettling story that takes hold of the reader." - Library Journal.
"Fused with spectral imagery and magnetic characters, Donohues ethereal foray into the unexpected consequences of love, impenetrable depths of loss, and infinite possibilities of faith is a chilling yet affirmative experience." - Booklist.
[A] beguiling tale of those who love well, but not wisely, unspooling like a poem embroidered on the heart ornate, painful and true. . . . While some readers might liken Donohues penchant for mystical realism to that of novelist Alice Hoffman, any sweeping comparisons shortchange both writers, whose immense gifts bear separate and distinct literary imprimaturs. Still, he shares Hoffmans uncanny ear for capturing the libretto of childhood ..." BookPage.
More Information:
More about the book including a reading guide can be found at the author's website.
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