Wells Tower's short story collection, Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned was one of 2009's critical darlings. A New York Times Book Review Notable Book of the Year, it received raves from Kakutani to Ruland. Here's what no less a short story luminary than Deborah Eisenberg had to say about the collection in the New York Review of Books:
The phrase "well-crafted" suggests an unfortunate analogy between a piece of fiction and a piece of furniture. And there is a surprising amount of fiction around that is reasonably accomplished and graceful, or strikingly ornamented, or that skillfully reproduces previous successes in structure or tone and yet feels synthetic and inert -- made up, in short, rather than like something that has been transcribed from a revelatory vision.
That cannot be said of Wells Tower's wonderful first collection of short fiction, Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned. The stories are indeed solid and polished; in fact, they're conspicuously artful, but proficiency -- obviously a sine qua non of any good work -- and finesse are irritating only when they substitute for soul, and this book seems to have come forth from a deep, disruptive source. The stories live and breathe with purpose.
The collection has just been released in paperback from Picador and we're happy to offer a copy to a lucky TEV reader. It's been a while, so to remind everyone of the rules: Just drop an email, subject line "RAVAGE ME". Make sure you include your full mailing address. (You'd be surprised how often people leave out this step.) We'll take all entries until 6 p.m. PST on Sunday, January 17, and then we'll turn to the Random Number Generator to select a winner. (The RNG is notoriously unmoved by pleas, threats and bribes but they are always amusing to your host.) We'll post the winner on Monday and return with literary news on Tuesday.
Comments