Alix Ohlin is the author of six books, including the novel Dual
Citizens, which was shortlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize and
the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize. Her work has appeared in
The New Yorker, The Best American Short Stories, and many other
places. She lives in Vancouver, where she is the Director of the
UBC School of Creative Writing.
FINALIST FOR THE ATWOOD GIBSON WRITERS' TRUST FICTION
PRIZE
"The collection explore[s] desire and grief through a finely drawn
and eclectic cast of characters... Moving... Ohlin’s sly irony
leavens the aching plights of characters for whom closure is
unattainable... True-to-life."
—Rachel Yoder, The New York Times Book Review
"Glittering... Shot through with dark humor and keen powers of
observation, this collection probes our contradictions with
incisive clarity."
—Esquire
"Ohlin’s slyly humorous and devastatingly sensuous collection of
short fiction shines a brilliant light on women’s inchoate
desires."
—O Magazine
"That’s the magic, though: the seeming simplicity of the prose, the
plain-spoken quality underpinning these stories, conceals a
staggering level of craft, of command and expertise. Most readers
will never notice it, slipping effortlessly into the story,
transfixed as Ohlin pulls a rabbit from a hat.”
—The Toronto Star
“There’s no shortage of phrases, sentences, and paragraphs to
savour on every page … The elegant stories are delectable,
electric, and clever … An exceptional, satisfying reading
experience.”
—Vancouver Sun
“Every story in this exquisite collection is a gem full of
startling surprises and insights into human nature. The collection
demands and rewards repeated readings, the better to savour Ohlin’s
near magical ability to achieve such depth with seemingly plain
language and plotting. Ohlin packs entire lives into mere pages,
allowing readers to join the flow of fully realized, complex
scenarios whose key moments exude the inevitable open-endedness of
real life. These stories bring us into the company of people who
want what we all want: to connect, to matter, to heal, and to cross
into unfamiliar territory, hoping that the risk will be
worthwhile.”
—Atwood Gibson Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize Jury Citation
"Ohlin’s collection revolves around the fleeting, fraught
connections her characters make with other people. Our lives are
threaded and tangled, Ohlin suggests, with other narratives, with
people who flit in and out of our plotline as they furiously act
out their own... The collection.. turns turns its attention to
the great sweep of human life, how our years are filled with
unexpected success or failure, how people reveal or hide
themselves.... The great trick of Ohlin’s collection [is] to tame
all the wildness of life into something we can briefly hold."
—Rebecca Saltzman, Women's Review of Books
"Another rich collection full of insights and sticky
contradictions... Ohlin reveals the depth of her characters
with empathy and precision... More than worth the price of
admission."
—Publishers Weekly
"[A] very fine collection... Ohlin’s stories have a quiet
elegance to them and a restraint, although they’re filled, too,
with grief and with loss... The book is a pleasure to behold... A
wry and moving collection that supplies no easy, unearned
endings."
—Kirkus
“Calling all fans of Lorrie Moore, Deborah Eisenberg, and Robin
Black: You have a new favorite writer.”
–Newark Star-Ledger
“[Ohlin] has a rare gift for examining the confusions of the 21st
century, exploring the ways in which addictions, afflictions,
attractions, and random impulses shape our lives.”
–The Boston Globe
"Alix Ohlin is a sensitive writer, alert to the look and feel of
things, and to the comedies and contradictions of her characters’
obsessions."
–The New York Times Book Review
"With language intensely evocative and keenly focused on the
nuances that define each of us as individuals, Ohlin delves into
the lives of her characters–even in her shortest pieces–and reveals
a depth to them, a poignancy, that is deeply affecting."
—The Baltimore Sun
“This cunning writer yanks you inside her world.”
—The San Francisco Chronicle
“Ohlin’s characters are so genuine you’ll be reminded of people you
know, love and hate. For better or worse, you may even see yourself
in the pages.”
–Marie Claire
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