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The Fires
The Fires

The Fires

FICTION

128 Pages, 5 x 8

Formats: Trade Paper, EPUB, PDF, Mobipocket

Trade Paper, $10.00 (US $10.00) (CA $12.00)

Publication Date: September 2007

ISBN 9780977679911

Rights: WOR

Santa Fe Writer's Project (Sep 2007)

eBook

eBook Editions Available

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Overview

From Alan Cheuse, National Public Radio's "Voice of Books"

Finely-honed portraits of hope and change, these two novellas are linked so skillfully that they achieve the intensity of a single novel in which some characters succeed and others fail on separate but equally compelling quests. In "The Fires," Gina Morgan makes a pilgrimage to Uzbekistan to carry out her husband's final wish—to be cremated—only to find herself entirely at sea in the strange new reality of the former Soviet republic, while in "The Exorcism," Tom Swanson begins to make sense of his life when he retrieves his angry daughter from her exclusive New England college after her expulsion for setting fire to a grand piano.

Reviews

"The two novellas that make up The Fires—one of sorrow and one of radiance—are filled with characters trying to maneuver that space between creation and destruction."  —Ana Menendez, author, Loving Che and In Cuba I Was a German Shepherd


"The Fires offers the twin bequeathing of profound sadness and enchantment. Mr. Cheuse is a writer of immense gifts."  —Howard Norman, author, The Bird Artist and Devotion


"One of the smartest, most trustworthy reviewers in America. Now he shows us where he gets his authority—a fiction writer of startling talent."  —John Gardner, author, Grendel and The Sunlight Dialogues


"[Cheuse] reminds us how close art and chaos really are."  —The New York Times Book Review

Author Biography

Alan Cheuse is a longtime book commentator on National Public Radio's "All Things Considered" and the author of The Light Possessed and The Grandmothers' Club: A Novel. A teacher in the writing program at George Mason University and the Squaw Valley Community of Writers, his short fiction has appeared in The Antioch Review, The New Yorker, Ploughshares, Prairie Schooner, and The Southern Review. He lives in Washington, DC.