I'm thrilled to announce that Aqueduct has just taken delivery of Elysium, a debut novel by Jennifer Marie Brissett. It's a gorgeous book that comes recommended by three major writers, Jeffrey Ford, Elizabeth Hand, and James Patrick Kelly, and is getting strong reviews. In Elysium, a computer program etched into the atmosphere has a story to tell, the
story of two people, of a city lost to chaos, of survival and love. The
program’s data, however, has been corrupted. As the novel's characters
struggle to survive apocalypse, they are sustained and challenged by the
demands of love in a shattered world both haunted and dangerous.
Jeffrey Ford writes: "Wow! Jenn Brissett's new novel Elysium from Aqueduct Press is a knockout.
The writing and structure of the book are so accomplished, I'm amazed
this is a first novel. The style flows and draws you into the fiction and
keeps you there—poetic in it's imagery but simultaneously economical.
It's a science fiction, post-apocalyptic, tale, a love story, but not your
dumb old man's love story. A love story for a new age. The structure of
the novel was the most startling thing to me—a complex construction that
never comes across as complicated. The effect is like a magic trick. Great
characters that make the adventure worth the journey. I hope reviewers
don't miss this one."
And here's Elizabeth Hand: "It's really quite
difficult for me to believe it's a first novel, it's so good: incredibly
ambitious, beautifully written, moving, and with an extremely poignant
ending, not to mention that remarkable, intricate balancing act with all
your various hall-of-mirrors characters."
And James Patrick Kelly: "Jennifer Marie Brissett has written an audacious first novel that pushes
against the limits of the form. With a spiral narrative and a dance of
identity and incident, she limns an array of characters and their worlds in
deft strokes. Be warned that you will puzzle about the story behind the
stories as you read this novel, only to discover a profound and moving
answer at its conclusion. With its bold interrogation of gender, Elysium
is a book like no other."
Publishers Weekly writes: "Brissett deftly handles the challenge of a multitude of characters all
being the same people in a multitude of places that are the same place,
while exploring complicated questions about identity."
The Future Fire writes: This is a complex, dense book, and reminds me of the best parts of
Kate Atkinson’s Life After Life and David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas.
Brissett’s novel, her first, is as ambitious and experimental as those works, and
I hope it receives similar attention.... What the book may lack in
philosophical meditation it makes up for in emotional resonance: every
character Brissett draws is, in one way or another, an emotional
survivor—and a visceral one at that. The feeling of loss pervades the
novel, reminding us that sometimes it’s not enough to survive, that
living requires more than that in ways that only the best writers and
thinkers—and stories—can describe."
Jenn talks at length about the novel with Julia Wade, on a videocast here.
The book is available now from Aqueduct Press in both trade paperback and e-book editions. You can purchase it here.
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
Thursday, November 20, 2014
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Update on WisCon Chronicles 9
Mary Anne Mohanraj has informed me that she's now
"reading the submissions for Aqueduct Press's WisCon Chronicles 9 (essays, fiction, poetry, etc., centered around the themes of intersections and alliances -- you need not attend WisCon to submit). Although the deadline has formally closed, I will likely still be looking for some individual pieces to fill out the anthology. If you're interested in submitting still, please send me a query at mohanraj@mamohanraj.com, with a brief description of what you'd be sending; I'll let you know by the end of the week whether I'd like to see it.
"I am open to topical material (such as those responding to various recent controversies in our field) as well as pieces on other subjects."
"reading the submissions for Aqueduct Press's WisCon Chronicles 9 (essays, fiction, poetry, etc., centered around the themes of intersections and alliances -- you need not attend WisCon to submit). Although the deadline has formally closed, I will likely still be looking for some individual pieces to fill out the anthology. If you're interested in submitting still, please send me a query at mohanraj@mamohanraj.com, with a brief description of what you'd be sending; I'll let you know by the end of the week whether I'd like to see it.
"I am open to topical material (such as those responding to various recent controversies in our field) as well as pieces on other subjects."
Monday, November 3, 2014
Three cheers for Arrate!
Arrate Hidalgo Sanchez, who has been Aqueduct Press's intern since March, has finished her internship. We Aqueductistas might have been feeling sad about saying good-bye to her, but the good news is that she's joining Aqueduct as an associate editor. Over the course of her internship, Arrate has demonstrated a great talent for editing. And she is thoughtful and meticulous. Our submissions have been rising sharply, and (as probably a few of you know very well, who've been waiting for me to get to your book) I've been struggling to keep up with them. Each book takes a lot of time, and I have only so much to give (if I'm to have a life at all, that is). And so I'm deliriously happy to have Arrate's help with the front-line editing.
ETA 11/23/2014
Kath has asked me to clarify my role in reading in submissions: viz., that I myself read only a fraction of those we receive. Kath and Arrate are Aqueduct's first readers. Not only have our submissions in toto been rising sharply, but the number reaching me are, too.
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