
From Publishers Weekly
Evenson accesses dark, unusual facets of human frailty, powerlessness and fear in this collection, haunted by themes of amnesia, aphasia and creeping infirmity. Hecker, the protagonist of O'Henry Prize–winner Mudder Tongue, can't control which words he says and is incapable of expressing even the nature of the problem to his daughter, who thinks he just needs to get out more. A similar terror informs the title story, in which a plague of amnesia afflicts the area where Arnaud lives. The stricken forget their own names, bleed from the eyes and mouth, then lapse into unconsciousness and death. Arnaud catches the illness, and as he makes his way through a landscape of quarantined apartments, looters and corpses, he interacts with the dead and soon-to-be-dead in an effort to try to remember what he is trying to accomplish. Other ailments make cameos—blindness in Helpful, insomnia in Dread—and the thematic anxiety is heightened by graphic novelist Sally's foreboding black and white line illustrations. This intense, nightmarish collection captures the fear of night terrors, when one wakes in the middle of the night, unable to move.
The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story by Diane Ackerman
Great finds :)
ReplyDeleteThey both sound good!
ReplyDeleteI want to read The Zookeeper's Wife too!
ReplyDeleteReally good finds! I am interested in both!
ReplyDeleteThe Zookeeper's Wife has me interested.
ReplyDeleteBoth of these sound amazing! I have never heard of Fugue States before.
ReplyDeleteI read The Zookeepers Wife a while back...I hope you enjoy it!
ReplyDeleteThe Zookeeper's Wife Looks good to me.
ReplyDeleteOoo, Zookeeper's Wife is going on my ever-growing TBR list.
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I read The Zookeeper's Wife a few years ago (before blogging) and liked it. Since blogging I have seen mixed reviews of it though, and wonder if I would still like it as much now.
ReplyDelete'Zookeeper's Wife' sounds interesting!
ReplyDeleteI just finished listening to The Zookeeper's Wife on audio book and I really loved it. I thought the story was compelling, and the author did a great job illustrating characters from all the historical information she had. I hope you get a chance to read it!
ReplyDelete