Praised for his *"beautifully crafted and strangely surreal"* (Peter Matthiessen) stories, Terrence Holt had been operating under the literary radar for more than fifteen years, placing award-winning stories in such noted journals as Zoetrope, Kenyon Review, and TriQuarterly. With the release of this debut collection, Holt's work takes its *"rightful place besides those works of genius—fiction, philosophy, theology—unafraid of axing into our iced hearts"* (William Giraldi, New York Times Book Review). Whether chronicling a plague that ravages a New England town or the anguish of a son who keeps his father's beating heart in a jar, Holt's stories oscillate between the rational and the surreal, the future and the past, masterfully weaving together reality and myth. Like Poe or Hawthorne, *"Holt is a gifted wordsmith, his sentences carefully shaped and often beautiful, and he spins these ancient, irresolvable dilemmas in an elegiac poetry"* (Los Angeles Times). - [W. W. Norton][1]
[1]: http://books.wwnorton.com/books/detail.aspx?ID=17055
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