TOMMY ORANGE is a graduate of the MFA program at the Institute of American Indian Arts. An enrolled member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma, he was born and raised in Oakland, California.
PULITZER PRIZE FINALIST • PEN/HEMINGWAY AWARD WINNER • A NEW YORK
TIMES BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR • CENTER FOR FICTION FIRST NOVEL PRIZE
WINNER • NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD WINNER • ANDREW
CARNEGIE MEDAL FOR EXCELLENCE IN FICTION NOMINEE
One of the Best Books of the Year: The Washington Post, NPR, Time,
O, The Oprah Magazine, The Dallas Morning News, GQ, Entertainment
Weekly, BuzzFeed, San Francisco Chronicle, The Boston Globe
“Powerful. . . . There There has so much jangling energy and brings
so much news from a distinct corner of American life that it’s a
revelation.” —The New York Times
“With a literary authority rare in a debut novel, it places Native
American voices front and center before readers’ eyes.” —NPR/Fresh
Air
“An astonishing literary debut.” —Margaret Atwood
“Masterful. . . . White-hot. . . Devastating.” —The Washington
Post
“Pure soaring beauty.” —The New York Times Book Review
“Stunning.” —The Boston Globe
“Brilliantly, furiously, magnificently, tragically, the story of
America.” —Elle
“Heartbreaking.” —Esquire
“Electrifying.” —Entertainment Weekly
“Brilliant, propulsive.” —People
“Exquisite. . . . [An] exceptional debut. . . . Sublimely render[s]
the truth of experiences that are passed over.” —San Francisco
Chronicle
“Mr. Orange’s sparkling debut is not merely a literary triumph but
a cultural and political one, too. It is a work of defiance and
recovery.” —The Economist
“Powerful. . . . As contemporary, tragic, and American as a
breaking news alert.” —The Christian Science Monitor
“Stunning.” —Mother Jones
“How do you rewrite the story of a people? This question shapes
Tommy Orange’s sorrowful, beautiful debut novel. . . . Even in its
tragic details, it is lyrical and playful, shaking and shimmering
with energy.” —The Guardian
“Gripping. . . . Unforgettable. . . . There There paints a vivid
portrait of American lives few readers have ever known.”
—Bustle
“Reader, I must confirm: There There really is an extremely good
book. . . . This is a trim and powerful book, a careful exploration
of identity and meaning in a world that makes it hard to define
either. Go ahead and go there there.” —Constance Grady, Vox
“This is the kind of novel you finish and immediately need your
book club to read so you can talk about it with other people. . . .
It’s also a powerful reminder of the ability of narrative to move
minds.” —GOOP
“Staggering. . . . Expertly rendered. . . . Orange successfully
refutes the idea of a monolithic Native American identity.”
—Buzzfeed
“As funny as it is heartbreaking, tracking the multigenerational
story of twelve Native Americans with themes of violence, identity,
and despair.” —PopSugar
“Orange’s novel is one of healing, pulling together the intimacies
of family, community, history, and violence.” —The Rumpus
“An ambitious and galvanizing novel. . . . It’s somehow a
page-turner at the same time, propelled by the incandescent energy
of Orange’s prose.” —Thrillist
“Bursting with talent and big ideas… Funny and profane and
conscious of the violence that runs like a scar through American
culture.” —The Seattle Times
“[A] smashing debut. . . . Urgent. . . . The voices are dynamic,
varied and very much of the moment, a chorus of American
Indian voices coming straight from the city.” —The Dallas
Morning News
“Compulsively readable. . . . A dazzlingly intricate narrative that
marries the personal and the ancestral. . . . A masterful work.”
—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“Searing. . . . There There finds satisfying richness in the
minutiae of its characters' lives—their daily victories and losses,
enduring frustrations, acts of tenderness, and senses of wonder.”
—The Austin Chronicle
“[Orange] writes with such finely honed literary craft that the
book fairly begs to be read more than once. . . . It is gritty as
well as beautiful, poetic; it is shocking, sometimes very amusing,
often emotionally gut-punching, and rife with unsentimental
insight.” —Santa Fe New Mexican
“Orange’s book is truly a page turner filled with
multi-generational accounts of violence, recovery, memory,
identity, beauty, and even a little despair. It’s a book where you
as the reader can’t put down until you finish it with both a sense
of accomplishment and a feeling of anticipation of what could
happen next.” —Lakota Country Times
“This is not just a novel. It’s a carefully, beautifully crafted
speech into a megaphone, telling stories of real, contemporary
Native life in a specific place. . . . It offers a glimpse of an
interconnected life, a world in which small stones don’t just sink
to the bottom of the sea but changes tides.” —The Times Literary
Supplement (London)
“Bold and engrossing. . . . There is hope in this book, hope in the
strength of stories told and stories that are finally heard. . . .
The wonder of this accomplished debut is the way in which he has
got under his characters’ skins, allowing them to speak for
themselves. . . . This is a powerful novel of pain and
possibility.” —Financial Times
“Welcome to a brilliant and generous artist who has already
enlarged the landscape of American Fiction. There There is a comic
vision haunted by profound sadness. Tommy Orange is a new
writer with an old heart.” —Louise Erdrich
“There There drops on us like a thunderclap; the big, booming,
explosive sound of twenty-first century literature finally
announcing itself. Essential.” —Marlon James, author of A
Brief History of Seven Killings
“There There is a miraculous achievement, a book that wields
ferocious honesty and originality in service of telling a story
that needs to be told. This is a novel about what it means to
inhabit a land both yours and stolen from you, to simultaneously
contend with the weight of belonging and unbelonging.” —Omar El
Akkad, author of American War
“There There is an urgent, invigorating, absolutely vital book by a
novelist with more raw virtuosic talent than any young writer I've
come across in a long, long time.” —Claire Vaye Watkins, author of
Gold Fame Citrus
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