Don Lee is probably best known to many of you for his time spent at Ploughshares. His novel Country of Origin won an American Book Award, the Edgar Award for Best First Novel, and a Mixed Media Watch Image Award for Outstanding Fiction, and his story collection Yellow won the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Members Choice Award from the Asian American Writers' Workshop.
He's got a new novel out this month called Wrack and Ruin, and here's some of the advance praise the book has garnered:
"Don Lee is a gift, and his latest novel, Wrack and Ruin, is magnificent: bold, beautiful, heartfelt, witty, broad of scope, and yet as intimate as love given, or love received" - Junot Diaz
"Wrack and Ruin is a spectacular romp, one of those rare novels whose goofiness is matched by its gravitas. Don Lee is a master of the tightly woven plot; this book is nearly impossible to put down, though at times you may have to pause out of sheer hilarity." - Jennifer Egan
We suspect that many of you will be as eager to read this as we are, so thanks to the kind folks at Norton, we are offering not one but five copies, each signed by the author, for today's TEV giveaway. So we all know the drill by now - please stand, put your right hand over your heart and recite with us: Drop us an email, subject line "RUIN ME". Previous winners ineligible. Please include your full mailing address. Entries will be accepted until 7 p.m. PST, at which time the Random Number Generator will have its way with five of you. While you're waiting for the outcome, you can check out this interesting interview with Lee.
UPDATE: We're a bit delayed this weekend on selecting a winner but expect to have something here for you come Monday.
UPDATE REDUX: Thanks to Norton for increasing our winning pool to seven copies! Congratulations go to: Sue Buchman, Leslie deVries, Peter Erichsen, David Remy, Brett Beach, Casey Kittrell and Gonzalo Baeza.
I really liked Country of Origin and the way it played with identity, how fluid it is, how artificial and self-constructed it can be, and how different identities can overlap in one person. And yeah, it was dark, but I like dark, so I'm looking forward to the noir elements in the new one.
Posted by: denise hamilton | April 21, 2008 at 04:56 PM