JILL BIALOSKY is the author of six acclaimed collections of poetry, three critically acclaimed novels, and two memoirs, including History of a Suicide: My Sister's Unfinished Life, a New York Times bestseller. Her poems and essays have appeared in The Best American Poetry; The New Yorker; The Atlantic; Harper's Magazine; O, The Oprah Magazine; The Kenyon Review; Harvard Review; and The Paris Review, among other publications. She is executive editor and vice president at W. W. Norton & Company. Her work has been a finalist for the James Laughlin Award, the Paterson Poetry Prize, and the Books for a Better Life Awards. In 2014, she was honored by the Poetry Society of America for her distinguished contribution to poetry. She lives in New York City.
Finalist for the Gotham Book Prize
The New York Times, New and Noteworthy
A Good Morning America Most Anticipated Book for
September
Oprah Books, A Best Book of the Fall
PureWow, A Must Read Book for September
A Literary Hub Most Anticipated Book of the Year
"Jill Bialosky wrote a real page-turner that weaves together love,
desire, parenthood, and art. Trust me-The Deceptions is a
book you won't be able to put down. " -Katie Couric
"A thought provoking novel." -Marion Winik, Newsday
"Bialosky urgently captures the moment in an adult's life when
reflection leads to regret, and a desire to recapture the promise
of one's youth becomes a kind of desperation. A vulnerable and
searching tale of art, myth, and mortality." -Oprah
Daily
"Throughout The Deceptions, the author is willing to
confront nuance, more than one way of looking at something and the
lies people tell themselves, as well as others. As is noted while
contemplating one statue of Heracles, pathos is an important aspect
of this novel. Emotions are both acknowledged and projected. The
Deceptions is an engrossing, engaging novel . . . It is a novel
that can stay with the reader for a very long time." -Daily
Kos
"This clever writer was able to combine poetry, myth and betrayal,
and I didn't want this strange, dark story to end . . . It is a
disturbing, but page-turning, tale." -Claudia Sternbach, Lookout
Santa Cruz
"There is nary a word out of place in The Deceptions, and
there are long stretches of prose where nearly every sentence
carries an almost electric charge . . . Superb." -The East
Hampton Star
"We often pigeonhole people and their abilities: you're a writer or
an editor, a poet or a novelist, creative or strategic. My
(admittedly anecdotal) experience suggests that such binaries are a
fallacy, and Jill Bialosky is a distinctive example of how one can
successfully juggle 'all of the above.' As Executive Editor of W.W.
Norton, she shepherds talented writers through the publishing
process; as a writer, she's a poet, essayist and novelist; and as
an interviewee, she's tremendously thoughtful and engaged. The
Deceptions reflects that sensitivity, examining both an
individual's complicated experience as an educator and writer,
mother and wife. Most of all, the protagonist-like many of us-is
seeking elusive concepts of success and love, and creating a
fulfilling, and integrated self in a complex world." -Mandana
Chaffa, Chicago Review of Books
"A complex exploration of consent and violation, sexuality and
ambition . . . With the assured hand of a sculptor, Bialosky
excavates the all-too-relatable dilemma of whether to face searing
realities or bury ourselves in myth." -Ruth Madievsky,
BOMB
"A poet as well as a novelist, Bialosky deftly balances these vast
universal questions with tight descriptions of personal, arresting
images. The result is a pressing, mesmerizing novel that explores
the intense emotional journey of a writer, teacher, and mother
grappling with the shifts in these identities in the aftermath of
betrayal . . . [T]he photographs add to the immersive sense of the
physical space. Even more, the narrator's readings of these pieces
of art are beautiful and made all the more so because we can follow
along . . . Bialosky employs a subtle framework in the novel
featuring the narrator's book that pays off beautifully when this
shapes the end of the story. Even without the promising literary
framing, the novel is an unforgettable read . . . Bialosky elevates
the ordinary with her exceptional attention to detail and her
poignant observations." -Ceillie Clark-Keane,
Ploughshares
"The writing is superb and specific while the character is real and
interesting, which promises something worth finishing to the end.
Bialosky has a way of inserting information in her text with such
precision and authority that's hard not to be admired while reading
. . . Bialosky is a master of the craft and shows off her talents
in this latest work. It is a story about deception in all forms,
but it's also about acceptance and forgiving yourself so there is
room for hope." -Clarissa Chesanek, The Brooklyn Rail
"[Her] protagonist will fascinate any reader who has felt
marginalized, belittled, and erased by the patriarchy . . . I can't
recommend this book enough."-Denise Duhamel, Best American
Poetry (blog)
"Poetry and inspiration, obsession and divinity, all come under
Bialosky's purview in her elegantly constructed fable of trying to
create while everything else falls apart." -Ed Simon, The
Millions, A Most Anticipated Book of the Year
"A stunning tale of entitlement, betrayal, creativity, and true
power." -Booklist
"The great Greeks-Odysseus, Herakles, Aphrodite, and, centrally,
Leda and the Swan-circle around this powerfully written account of
a woman in a kind of slow crisis and help her interrogate her
marriage and desires. Then, in an extraordinary, explosive final
act, a profound act of betrayal lifts the novel towards genuine
tragedy. The Deceptions is a deeply felt and formally
original tour-de-force." -Salman Rushdie
"In The Deceptions Jill Bialosky captures the gutted hollow
of the empty nest, the weight of marriage, and the ember of desire
that is desperate for air. Bialosky explores the female artist's
need to take risks, to be seen and known, against her need for
comfort, safety, and home. In stunning, finely tuned prose,
Bialosky captures the music of marriage, the complexity of female
ambition, sexual hunger, and rage. This story unfurls in a
beautiful weave among objects from The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Myth, archetype, and history come to life and in the end we are
returned to the present-this moment-and the question of what it is
to be human, to risk, to fail, to suffer the pain of love." -A.M.
Homes
"At once classical and contemporary, Jill Bialosky's powerful new
novel weaves together themes of art and life, sexuality and family,
gender dynamics and selfhood. The Deceptions is urgent,
unsettling, and utterly consuming-a triumph." -Claire Messud
"I was immediately swept away by this searing, elegant portrait of
a woman in a place of psychological and emotional precarity. Jill
Bialosky brings us with great delicacy and arresting sensuality
into a world which becomes so real we cannot look away. The
Deceptions is at once mesmerizing and masterful." -Dani
Shapiro, author of Inheritance
Praise for The Prize:
"The Prize is a graceful, quiet novel that finds its gravitational
pull in the dissonance between the transcendence of art and the
slog of everyday life. Bialosky has several books of poetry to her
name, and her writing glows with insight . . ." -The New York Times
Book Review
"Among the most resonant aspects of the novel is its deep
understanding about the communicative nature of art." -David Ulin,
Los Angeles Times
"This graceful novel balances the transcendence of art against the
slog of everyday life." -The New York Times Sunday Book Review
(Editor's Choice)
"This sharp-eyed novel of the art world follows the fortunes of a
partner in a prestigious New York gallery who struggles with the
memory of his brilliant but volatile father, the tempers of a
high-maintenance artist and her competitive husband, the distress
of a rocky marriage, and the temptation of extramarital adventure.
The novel's characters are caught in predictable midlife crises-'Do
you ever wake up and wonder how you got here?' one asks-but
Bialosky deepens our sense of these troubles with well-chosen
details, such as the protagonist's luxury-goods addiction. The plot
is well crafted, carrying the reader to a surprising end." -The New
Yorker
"The portrayal of an art world torn between crass commercialism and
genuine expression is grippingly achieved. Ms. Bialosky is a book
editor as well as a writer, and she knows something about the
agonies and rewards of cajoling great work from basket-case
artists. And when she describes the effect of paintings upon the
senses (simply viewing Pierre Bonnard's 'Le Petit Dejeuner,' 'full
of light and mystery,' causes the stress to drain from Edward's
body), her own writing harnesses the agility and beauty the book so
rapturously exalts." -Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
"There is a Jamesian aspiration in this novel of bitter rivalries
and thwarted passions, which hops between New York, Europe and
Edward's home in Connecticut, where he lives with his disengaged
wife and daughter" -Joanna Scutts, The Washington Post
"A poet, memoirist, and editor, Bialosky brings an insider's
understanding of the complicated layers of being an artist today to
this novel in which an art dealer is thrown off balance in the
run-up to an awards competition, with ripples affecting his family,
his future, and the artists he takes under his wing." -The Boston
Globe
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