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Book Cover for: Daybook from Sheep Meadow: The Notebooks of Tallis Martinson, Peter Dimock

Daybook from Sheep Meadow: The Notebooks of Tallis Martinson

Peter Dimock

In his newest novel, cult author Peter Dimock explores the shuttering of empire and literature's capacity to re-lay America's political trajectory.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Deep Vellum Publishing
  • Publish Date: Jun 8th, 2021
  • Pages: 150
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 7.90in - 4.90in - 0.50in - 0.40lb
  • EAN: 9781646050598
  • Categories: LiteraryEpistolary (Letters, Diaries, etc.)Political

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About the Author

Peter Dimock has long worked in publishing, both at Random House and as senior executive editor for history and political science at Columbia University Press, where he worked with authors including Angela Davis, Eric Hobsbawm, Toni Morrison, and Amartya Sen. His novels A Short Rhetoric for Leaving the Family and George Anderson: Notes for A Love Song in Imperial Time were published by Dalkey Archive Press.

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Praise for this book

"Just an absolutely wonderful, strange, Borgesian work, but with more direct lyric sentiment. Brilliant, really." -Tom Sleigh

"What words, and what unexplored ways of reading, can restore a sense of historical continuity in the face of the normalized atrocities of American empire? Peter Dimock remains our most acute pursuer and vigilant disciple of that overwhelming question. T. S. Eliot said of Henry James that "he had a mind so fine that no idea could violate it," and if Dimock's text manifests an equivalent fineness of mind, its singularity nonetheless takes shape around both the burdens and the possibilities of those historical violations that it insists cannot not happen. As winningly wayward and arresting as his George Anderson, though both more personal and more multiply wrought, Daybook at Sheep's Meadow sounds a clarion call in the key of a sadness beyond outrage and a love beyond sadness--marshaling our ethical enmeshments in the infinite value of a present beyond empire and a future perhaps still not quite beyond imagining. There is, and could be, no other book like this." -Lee Zimmerman, author of Trauma and the Discourse of Climate Change: Literature, Psychoanalysis and Denial

"The intricacy of the 'method' each narrator devises itself indicates that ordinary language alone can't reverse the linguistic corruption brought about by the public officials who convert ordinary language into an instrument for the adulteration of truth." -Daniel Green, Full Stop

"Dimock (A Short Rhetoric for Leaving the Family) provocatively weaves history and philosophy into an unorthodox fictional biography... This experiment is a resounding success." --Publishers Weekly

Reviews of George Anderson: Notes for A Love Song in Imperial Time

"Peter Dimock... possesses the rich, intricate, and subtle patternings of the verbal lacemaker's craft." -Toni Morrison

"How can we live with ourselves? I mean, really? How can we? This is the book's prevailing question, one that rises from the pages less as a pretty love song than as a helpless keen. Fales invents and pursues his method as a way to fix history so he can live with its implications." -Heidi Julavits, New York Times

"George Anderson is indeed this ambitious, a work of great ethical force and historical scope, written in the singular form of what might best be described as -- try to imagine it -- an epistolary, synesthetic, anti-imperial self-help manual... What a remarkable novel: for a few radically hopeful lines at a time it imagines that a new history might be possible, imagines what it might mean to imagine this. Perhaps we cannot see and hear this history as clearly as its protagonist can. But we have for a moment felt his moral devastation and his hope as our own -- no small feat for a novel in imperial time.." -Hilary Plum, Los Angeles Review of Books

"George Anderson" requires some heavy mental lifting, but Fales's seeking voice and the book's innovative structure make it more of a calling than a chore. The rewards here are great: a fresh perspective on some of the thorniest events in recent American life, alongside enduring questions about history, art and narrative. Dimock's slender, sturdy investigation into their meaning should inspire anyone who wants to think deeply and philosophically about this great nation." -Veronica Esposito, Washington Post

"Peter Dimock's new novel, George Anderson: Notes for a Love Song in Imperial Time is about torture and politics,