Still No Word from You: Notes in the Margin

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Product Details
Price
$26.00  $24.18
Publisher
Catapult
Publish Date
Pages
320
Dimensions
5.6 X 8.5 X 1.2 inches | 1.15 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781646221363

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About the Author
PETER ORNER is the author of the novels The Second Coming of Mavala Shikongo and Love and Shame and Love and the story collections Esther Stories, Last Car Over the Sagamore Bridge, and Maggie Brown & Others. His previous collection of essays, Am I Alone Here?: Notes on Living to Read and Reading to Live, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism. A three-time recipient of the Pushcart Prize, Orner's work has appeared in The Best American Short Stories, The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The Paris Review, Granta, McSweeney's, and has been translated into eight ­languages. He has been awarded the Rome Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a two-year Lannan Foundation Literary Fellowship, the California Book Award for fiction, the Edward Lewis Wallant Award for Jewish fiction, as well as a Fulbright in Namibia. He is the director of creative writing at Dartmouth College and lives with his family in Norwich, Vermont.
Reviews
Finalist for the Vermont Book Award
Finalist for the PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay

"Orner is a highly lauded author whose writing, in both fiction and nonfiction, is an act of wizardry. In each of these micro-essays, he reduces the meat of his own life down to the bone, then stirs in fatty excerpts from hundreds of stories, novels and poems by writers ranging from Woolf to Rhys, Babel to Kafka. The resulting brew sometimes scalds, sometimes soothes, but always proves that literature can be a kind of sustenance." --Stephanie Elizondo Griest, The New York Times Book Review

"Like its predecessor collection Am I Alone Here?, a 2016 finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in criticism, Still No Word From You is a book of conversations: Orner in dialogue with other books, Orner in dialogue with himself . . . Still No Word From You looks at its author's life through the lens of reading: memoir as daybook, as it were. In 107 short essays or chapters (some just a paragraph), Orner shapeshifts and time travels." --David Ulin, Los Angeles Times

"Yearning for lost time infuses every page of [Peter Orner's] second nonfiction collection . . . The book compiles 107 micro-essays that are part reader's notebook and part, in his words, 'reluctant memoir.' It's a meditation on storytelling from a wide-ranging thinker and reader, mining Orner's past, generations of family history and the many fictional folks swirling around his mind." --Lisa Taggert, The San Francisco Chronicle

"If there's an ideal autumn book, it's a book about books, writers and reading. Still No Word From You: Notes in the Margin (Oct. 11), by the always undervalued Peter Orner, swings seamlessly between his Highland Park boyhood (a Cheever tale, writ large) and his reading life, mourning family, and even stumbling on his mother's youthful marginalia." --Christopher Borrelli, Chicago Tribune

"[Orner's] compassion for humanity, both despite and because of the cruelties and the griefs which we inflict and suffer, gleams unmistakably through his prose." --Daniel Kraft, On the Seawall

"A heartfelt memoir in books and marginalia . . . In Peter Orner's Still No Word from You, literature and life are inextricably intertwined, each illuminating the other." --Julia M. Klein, The Forward

"Peter Orner's new book, Still No Word From You, reads like a full expression of a mind, in a different way than a novel might be an expression of a mind . . . The tone is intimate, digressive, and personal, and the cumulative effect is a total immersion in the author's way of seeing." --Emma Cline, Literary Hub

"Orner--a legitimate triple-threat: novelist, short story master, and prolific essayist--returns with an addictive collection of more than 100 buoyant essays organized around a single day and a wide range of emotions . . . [A] wise, welcoming, heartfelt book." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Pushcart Prize-winning fiction writer Orner (Maggie Brown & Others) brings his lyrical, mosaic style to the story of his own life in this gorgeous and contemplative memoir. Blending photographs, family lore, speculation, and literary musings, Orner's nonlinear narrative weaves through elliptical reflections and faint memories from his 1970s childhood to the sorrows and delights of his adulthood . . . When his fragmented ruminations loop back to a powerful impression or image or favorite book, the effect is like turning over a prism in one's hands, catching vivid flashes of light at each angle. Evocative and erudite, this meditation on impermanence and its ephemeral joys is a gem." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Peter Orner's work clings close to life, to the unadorned, untranscended, dear and haunting Actual." --Marilynne Robinson

"This is a unique concoction, with essays bleeding into stories, and coming out the other side, and creating something new. Still No Word from You is a beautiful piece of work that demonstrates the special illumination on life granted by a passion for reading." --Kevin Barry, author of Night Boat to Tangier

"What to call this gloriously strange marvel of a book devoted to other books? Who cares? Still No Word from You offers solace to those among us who look out windows, whose minds wander, who are bewildered by time and memory. It is an elegy to long-gone houses, bookstores, teachers, family, writers, and all of the murmuring dead; an ode to the parenthetical, which, it turns out, is not parenthetical at all; a beautiful testament to the way the books we love are not merely as real as life, they are life." --Maud Casey, author of City of Incurable Women

"Still No Word from You is a sharp-edged and heartfelt mosaic of the reading life. I know of no other writer working today who so exquisitely and seamlessly brings together storytelling, memoir, essay, and the act of reading as both a visionary and an intimate journey." --Eduardo Halfon, author of Mourning