|
|
||||
| About xx| xxBooks xx|xx Contact xx| xxReviewsxx |xx Ideasxx|xx Links | ||||
![]() |
|
2009.1.1.1
(Read, Print, or Download in >PDF>> Format)
..........·..........·..........·..........·..........·..........·
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FROM PROGRESSIVE PRESS P.O. Box 126, Joshua Tree, Calif. 92252 Tel. 760-366-3695. Fax 760-366-2937 Email: progpress.com Online: www.ProgressivePress.com WITH THE OLIVER ARTS AND OPEN PRESS 2578 Broadway (Suite #102) New York, NY 10025 Tel. 212-866-7425 Email: ericlarsen@ericlarsen.net Online: http://www.ericlarsen.net/oliverpress.01.html DECEMBER 29, 2008 Eric Larsen's long-awaited third novel, The End of the 19th Century, has been published under the imprint of Progressive Press. This major book is part three of a tetralogy entitled An American Memory. The novel is available through all Ingram distribution outlets including Amazon.com. Larsen radically stretches conventional fiction's reach with this story of a character whose childhood and coming-of-age are understandable only if the reader perceives that the young man's growth consists of his gradual internalizing of history—as he puts it, his coming to understand "the mysteries of space and time." At first, he sees only glimpses of life—through the briefly-opened "windows" of eyesight in early childhood. Later on, everything begins serving as windows into the past—objects, locations, landscapes, the town he's born in, the people in it—including his aging great-aunts Marie and Lutie, whose origins are well back in the 19th century. Through small things like a visit from his great-aunts one afternoon in 1944 (when he's four years old), a blimp cruising overhead in 1946, goldfish hovering beneath the surface of a pond, the sound of a train whistle in the night, Malcolm Reiner comes to understand first that things can be related "horizontally," then also "vertically"—relationships that, when combined with the element of time itself, reveal history—definable as life, followed by the absence of life—to be a web of such intricate complexity that it can't conceivably ever be understood. And yet Reiner dedicates his life to the "study of the mysteries of space and time." Through his childhood and adolescent "studies" he finds—and shows in splendid color to the reader—a sweep of time, atmosphere, and place from 1857 through 2010 that includes the history of his family; of West Tree, Minnesota ("West Tree reached its most perfect historical period sometime after the close of 1915 but before the beginning of 1923"); of the "Epoch of Walking," a period that both expressed and helped make possible the most supremely successful years of the town and region; and of Malcolm's own "years of perfect seeing," the period when, living on a farm outside West Tree, he's able, profoundly and poetically and with a vividness rare in fiction, actually to sense and see what America once was. But an end will come. Malcolm's extremely troubled father tries desperately—so Malcolm believes—to keep the Epoch of Walking from ending. But nothing can forestall its fate, and in or near 1950 the Epoch (as does Malcolm's time "of perfect seeing") begins dwindling away. The farm begins to go with it, and, eventually, also West Tree itself, but not before Reiner's sexual coming of age allows him a final cosmic—and uniquely comic—means of his own to hold space, time, and place together in a last attempt to prevent the end of everything. Reviewers at various publishing houses have called The End of the 19th Century "a profound act of memory, [an] American Proust," and have said it "is important, its writer gifted with genius," and that Larsen "is a brilliant writer." Larsen's first novel, also entitled An American Memory, appeared in 1988 and was said to "[take] the novel as close to poetry as it can go" while it "[captured] the land's pulsating rhythms" in what the New York Times called "language as sparse and wind-riven as the Midwest of [Larsen's] imagination." It won the Chicago Tribune's first Heartland Prize as that year's best novel from or about the Midwest, receiving an award of $5,000. In 1992 I Am Zoë Handke came out, again from Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. Author Ruth Moose wrote that it was "Marvelous, marvelous work" and said to readers that "If you love literature, writing so wonderful it makes you catch your breath, read Zoë Handke." Larsen is also the author of A Nation Gone Blind: America in an Age of Simplification and Deceit (2006), said by Publisher's Weekly to be "a rare intellectual page-turner. . . [that] deserves to be read by anyone who thinks—or thinks they think—for a living." The Mobile Press-Register added that "America's intellectual class cannot afford not to read this book." Larsen's fiction, essays, and articles have appeared in a range of publications from The South Dakota Review through The New Republic and Harper's. He lives in New York City. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO REQUEST REVIEW COPIES, CONTACT: The Oliver Arts and Open Press by telephone at 212-866-7425 by email at ericlarsen@ericlarsen.net online at http://www.ericlarsen.net/oliverpress.01.html or by mail at ..............................2578 Broadway ..............................Suite #102 ..............................New York, New York 10025 |
||