I'm pleased to announce the release of In Search of Lost Time, a novella by Karen Heuler published as a volume in Aqueduct's Conversation Pieces series in both small trade paperback and e-book editions. (You may recall that Karen's story "The Apartments," published in an earlier volume of the Conversation Pieces series, Other Places, is a finalist for the Shirley Jackson Awards.) You can purchase both of these volumes from Aqueduct Press now.
After beginning chemo for
a rare cancer, Hildy discovers an extraordinary talent—the ability to see and
take other people’s time. She also discovers there’s an underground market for
quality time. After all, who has enough time? The dying, especially, want to
get more of it, but giving it to them means taking it from someone else. How
moral is she? How will she juggle the black marketers’ strong-arm tactics and
her own quandaries about stealing something so precious and vital that it can
never be replaced?
Nisi Shawl writes, in her review for The Seattle Review of Books, "Author Karen Heuler's heroine Hildy discovers that chemo infusions
targeting malignant lesions on her "tempora"— an imaginary area of
the brain — allow her to see, manipulate, and ultimately steal other
people's time. Her superpowers neither free nor cure Hildy,
though. Instead, she struggles to integrate them into a humane and
principled philosophy while fending off the self-interested alliances
of warring would-be time-mongers. She girds herself for battle in
red-heeled boots, silk head scarves, and penciled-on eyebrows, but
kindness and self-reflection prove to be her most kickass
weapons."
(Read the whole review)
In Rich Horton's review for Locus, he writes: "It's a curious story, leaving the reader with more questions than
answers about what’s really going on, to say nothing of the morality
of the process (not that it isn’t questioned). Hildy herself is an
interesting character, recovering not just from cancer but from the
death of her married lover, and the people she encounters are likewise
a bit off-center. I was intrigued throughout..."
A
Conversation with Karen Heuler about In Search of Lost Time
Q: Why is there never enough
time?
It’s a little
bit like riding a good car on bad tires. You think everything’s fine until you
start skidding out of control going down an icy hill. Time, in this case, is
the tires. There’s nothing to grip, so there’s no way of negotiating how fast
it goes. When I think about time at this point in life, I can only think in
small leguments. When I was young, the road was longer. And I’m spending all my
time steering. This is called an extended metaphor, and the problem with
extended metaphors is that I never know when to stop. Or how. Like that car.
Q. What would life be like if we could sample other people’s memories?
I’d love to do
that. There are a lot of people in the world that I find unfathomable. If I
could see the bits and pieces that formed them, I could see what makes them
tick. That might explain why they chose to do evil while I chose to do good.
Q. Really? How good are you?
I give to many
charities. Small amounts, yes, but I’m not rich. I live-trap mice and release
them. I used to release them too close to home, and they’d actually beat me
back to the kitchen. There was one night when I caught the same mouse four
times. Then I was told that it was best to take them at least two miles away. I
do that now. And I give them a little packed lunch to take with them.
Q. Is this book a comedy or a tragedy?
That really
depends on the reviews. I will cheerfully acknowledge whatever they want me to
acknowledge.
Q. Will this be made into an action-adventure movie?
There are a
lot of women in it. There are no explosions. There would be limited opportunity
for CGI. So, no.
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