Suppose you wrote a book. It started out as a novel about a journalist and a soldier but you weren't happy with it so you kept working. After a considerable amount of time, effort and banging your head on fence posts, you winnowed it down to a hard, flinty novella. You lost the journalist but kept the soldier, but your solider is not an American soldier and his war was fought in a faraway land in a time that is not now and but feels like forever ago. You do not know what to do with this book, so you enter it in a contest.
You win the contest. A small press wants to publish your book. How small? They've never published a book before, but they love your hard, flinty book with the main character with the funny sounding name and you love them for it.
The book gets published and garners amazing endorsements from amazing writers. Your publisher and agent set up readings for you. Only there is a problem: you don't live in New York or Chicago or San Francisco. Not even close. You live in Beijing. You've lived abroad for so long you have family and friends in the States who have forgotten what you look like. You buy a ticket. You fly to America. You've got ten days to see everyone you know and convince readers a good distraction from the unpopular war we're presently embroiled in is to read about an even more unpopular one.
That's why we decided to make this Roy Kesey week at TEV. Nothing in the World possesses none of the advantages that make a novel a success save one: it's a spectacular book. That should be the only one that matters, but it isn't.
Below you'll find a review of Nothing in the World by Ron Currie, Jr., a very smart and talented writer in his own right. We hope you stop in again this week for information about his readings in New York and Los Angeles, links to his work, a chance to win a signed copy of his book in the Nothing in the World contest and an interview with the man himself, wherein he offers his impressions of the United States after a long absence abroad.
If you know Roy's work you know that he deserves a platform that is far bigger than even TEV can provide; and if you don't know his work you're in for a treat.
Enjoy!
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