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Nominated for the 2020 Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a
First Novel. One of The Millions's Most Anticipated Books of the
Second-Half of 2020, one of Library Journal's 35 Standout
Summer/Fall 2020 Debut Novels, and one of Shondaland's 11 New Books
That Will Change How You Think About the Climate Crisis From the
author of the story collections Heartbreaker and Rag comes a
powerful and propulsive debut novel that examines activism, love,
and purpose When fifteen-year-old Xie moves from California to a
rural Southern town to live with his father he makes just two
friends, Jo and Leni, both budding environmental and animal
activists. One night, the three friends decide to free captive mink
from a local farm. But when Xie is the only one caught his small
world gets smaller: Kicked out of high school, he becomes
increasingly connected with nature, spending his time in the birch
woods behind his house, attending extremist activist meetings, and
serving as a custodian for what others ignore, abuse, and discard.
Exploring the woods alone one night, Xie discovers the relic of a
Catholic saint--the martyred Pancratius--in a nearby church. Regal
and dressed in ornate armor, the skeleton captivates him. After
weeks of visits, Xie steals the skeleton, hides it in his attic
bedroom, and develops a complex and passionate relationship with
the bones and spirit of the saint, whom he calls P. As Xie's
relationship deepens with P., so too does his relationship with the
woods--private property that will soon be overrun with loggers. As
Xie enacts a plan to save his beloved woods, he must also find a
way to balance his conflicting--and increasingly extreme--ideals of
purity, sacrifice, and responsibility in order to live in this
world. Maryse Meijer's The Seventh Mansion is a deeply moving and
profoundly original debut novel--both an urgent literary call to
arms and an unforgettable coming-of-age story about finding love
and selfhood in the face of mass extinction and environmental
destruction.
A man, forgotten by the world, takes care of his deaf brother while
euthanising dogs for a living. A stepbrother so desperately wants
to become his step-sibling that he rapes his girlfriend. In Maryse
Meijer's decidedly dark and searingly honest collection Rag, the
desperate human desire for connection slips into a realm that
approximates horror. Meijer's explosive debut collection,
Heartbreaker, reinvented sexualised and romantic taboos, holding
nothing back. In Rag, Meijer's fearless follow-up, she shifts her
focus to the dark heart of intimacies of all kinds, and the ways in
which isolated people's yearning for community can breed violence,
danger, and madness. With unparalleled precision, Meijer spins
stories that leave you troubled and slightly shaken by her uncanny
ability to elicit empathy for society's most marginalised people.
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The Conium Review - Vol. 7 (Paperback)
Chelsea Harris; Edited by (ghost editors) Maryse Meijer; Edited by James R. Gapinski
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