A Theory of Small Earthquakes

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21,000+ Reviews
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Product Details
Price
$17.95
Publisher
Catapult
Publish Date
Pages
352
Dimensions
6.61 X 8.33 X 0.95 inches | 0.76 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781593764302

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About the Author
Like a lot of women her age, Meredith Maran has a hard time believing she's a woman of her age. And yet she's published more than a dozen books, including The New Old Me, Why We Write About Ourselves, Why We Write, My Lie, and A Theory of Small Earthquakes. When she's not hiking Mount Hollywood, attending readings at indie bookstores, or scouring Los Angeles' finest thrift shops, she's writing for venues including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Christian Science Monitor, The Los Angeles Review of Books, The Rumpus, and Salon. The grateful recipient of fellowships from MacDowell and Yaddo and a member of the National Book Critics Circle, Meredith lives in a Silver Lake bungalow that's even older than she is.
Reviews
"Maran explores the vagaries of love and the true nature of family in this debut novel. --People

"Call it Two Women, One Man and a Baby. Maran's take on the modern family is at once unexpected and totally relatable." --Ladies' Home Journal

"This tender, timely story reminds us we don't need to read historical fiction to find novels about marriage; in fact, we need novels like A Theory of Small Earthquakes to help us understand the history same-sex marriage is making today." --San Francisco Chronicle Book Review

"A family's world is irrevocably rocked when an old female lover from Mom's past reappears, in Meredith Maran's sexy, audacious, politically charged, and sure-to-be-talked about first novel, A Theory of Small Earthquakes. Ah, l'amour, l'amour." --Vanity Fair

"Meredith Maran is a powerful storyteller with a big heart and a big talent." --Terry McMillan, author of Waiting to Exhale and How Stella Got Her Groove Back

"This intriguing, timely yarn gracefully brings up a number of provocative topical issues, most importantly the changing dynamics of what it means to be a family. Maran's novel effectively reminds us that this possible seismic social shift is really less a "hot topic" than a question of deeply human needs." --The Boston Globe

"A fictional parenting triangle that challenges assumptions." --Reader's Digest

"A love story that had me in tears at the end. Maran has written a thoughtful, moving, honest novel that is simultaneously personal and political." --Kate Christensen, author of The Astral and The Great Man

"Meredith Maran's dazzling debut is a provocative, funny, and deeply moving look at the ties that bind--and sometimes strangle--and the ways we struggle for the love we yearn for. I adored this novel." --Caroline Leavitt, author of Pictures of You

"Funny, lively, political, personal, nostalgic, touching, A Theory of Small Earthquakes deftly chronicles love and its various meanings. I enjoyed it greatly." --Meg Wolitzer, author of The Uncoupling and The Ten-Year Nap

"A smart, sexy, funny, wrenching, delicious story of lust and trust and love and family." --Anne Lamott, author of Imperfect Birds and Bird by Bird

"Any woman who has ever struggled against the odds to keep her family running smoothly will identify with complex, authentic, paradoxical Alison Rose, whose redemption is at stake in this marvelous novel. A Theory Of Small Earthquakes teaches us something new about love and sex, jealousy and loyalty, and also, and perhaps most importantly, motherhood. Meredith Maran's first novel is a powerful debut that left me waiting impatiently for her second." --Ayelet Waldman, author of Red Hook Road and Bad Mother

"In this groundbreaking novel, Meredith Maran has told a story few writers, if any, have explored: of a woman drawn to two lovers and two distinct worlds, and of the unlikely family she creates, with two extraordinarily different partners, each of whom speaks to a different aspect of her desire. With rare honesty and courage, Maran asks us to consider whether sexuality can be defined by preference for one gender or the other, or if--as this blunt story proposes--it is shifting and sometimes stormy as the tides." --Joyce Maynard, author of The Good Daughters and At Home in the World