I greatly admired Marisa Silver's fine novel, The God of War, when it came out last year. Here's what I said about it over at the Barnes & Noble Review:
Common themes of family, guilt, dysfunction, and shame informed many of the stories in Silver's debut collection, Babe in Paradise (2001), as well as her first novel, No Direction Home (2005). These concerns remain present in The God of War, but the story is primarily a sustained meditation on questions of agency and volition; the acceptance (or refusal) of responsibility and the apportioning of blame. Indeed, her damaged cast has settled in this remote backwater in the futile hope of controlling their own fate beyond the reach of government and society. That they largely fail suggests how impervious to geography and inescapably human the so-called human condition really is.
The God of War has just been released in paperback, and I'm pleased to offer a copy this week to a lucky TEV reader. (And I'm pretty sure I can arrange to have it signed for you, too.) It's been a while since we've done one of these, so we're probably all a bit rusty on the rules. Therefore: Drop us an email, subject line "GIMME SOME SILVER". Include your full mailing address, please, otherwise you will be disqualified and possibly mocked. All entries will be accepted until Sunday, June 28 at 6 p.m. PST, at which time the Random Number Generator will practice its own special brand of tough love. Until then ...
God of War is a great novel, and I also very much enjoy reading her short stories published sporadically in the NYer. Her story "Aliens Among Us" in Five Chapters which you pointed out some time ago is also phenomenal. (Thanks for that.) She is, along with Charles D'Ambrosio, probably one of the more talented and evocative younger writers pressing pencils around.
Posted by: leon | June 27, 2009 at 06:46 AM