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Book Cover for: Fra Keeler, Azareen Van Der Vliet Oloomi

Fra Keeler

Azareen Van Der Vliet Oloomi

Reader Score

70%

70% of readers

recommend this book

Critic Reviews

Great

Based on 3 reviews on

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The debut novel from PEN/Faulkner award-winning author of Call Me Zebra and Savage Tongues is a comic psychological thriller, an absurdist journey into the heart of darkness.

A man purchases a house, the house of Fra Keeler, moves in, and begins investigating the circumstances of the latter's death. Yet the investigation quickly turns inward, and the reality it seeks to unravel seems only to grow stranger, as the narrator pursues not leads but lines of thought, most often to hideous conclusions.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Dorothy a Publishing Project
  • Publish Date: Oct 9th, 2012
  • Pages: 128
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 6.90in - 5.50in - 0.40in - 0.35lb
  • EAN: 9780984469345
  • Categories: Humorous - Black HumorAbsurdistPsychological

About the Author

Van Der Vliet Oloomi, Azareen: - Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi is an Iranian-American writer of fiction and nonfiction. She received her MFA in Literary Arts from Brown University, and is a recipient of a Fulbright Grant to Catalonia, Spain. She is co-author of the Words Without Borders dispatch series ArtistsTalk: Israel/Palestine and is at work on a second project entitled The Catalan Literary Landscape, an exploration of notions of journey and the intersections between landscape and literature. She currently teaches in the MFA at Notre Dame University and lives in Indiana with her husband.

More books by Azareen Van Der Vliet Oloomi

Book Cover for: Call Me Zebra, Azareen Van Der Vliet Oloomi
Book Cover for: Savage Tongues, Azareen Van Der Vliet Oloomi

Critics’ reviews

Praise for this book

"Oloomi enters so fully and sympathetically into the mad logic of her narrator that scenic detail, chronology, cause and effect, and even such mundane props as cactus, mailman, and ringing phone are bent, doubled, or subsumed by the paranoid geometries of meaning he draws. . . . Subtly menacing, but not without humor, the novel derives momentum and tension from the space between its clear, intelligent language and the absolute unreliability of its narrator." --Slate

"A rare gem of a book that begs to be read again." --Publishers Weekly

"Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi writes sentences that are crisp and formal, but the madness they depict is anything but. Her ambition, to take you inside a completely unreliable narrator, still manages to create a rare and strong narrative drive. Controlled yet bizarre, it pulls you in." --Whiting Award judges

"The risks this novel takes are numerous, and so are the rewards." --Dinaw Mengetsu

"Obsessive/delightful, Fra Keeler subtly elaborates on life's details, its ordinary lunacies. Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi's observations are droll and often hilarious. Her novel's incidents pile up and on, tilting and shifting under the weight of language's bizarre disturbances. Fra Keeler is wonderfully imaginative, the work of a terrific young writer." --Lynne Tillman

"You ask: What sort of fiction are we reading here? Anticipating just this question, on her 'Acknowledgments' page, Oloomi provides a checklist of books and films that she says made this work 'possible' works by César Aira, Thomas Bernhard, Luis Buñuel, Nikolai Gogol, Alfred Hitchcock, and Clarice Lispector, to name only a handful from her inventory of what one could call the 'literature of madness, ' if 'madness' were not so reductive a term for the complexities to which Fra Keeler pays tribute." --American Book Review

"Ultimately, Fra Keeler's preoccupation with thought and a mind's unraveling reminds us that we're each ensconced within our own mind, we're stationed behind the window of our own perceptions, perhaps never truly knowing anything beyond ourselves. There's something magical and mad in this." --Music and Literature

"Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi is the descendent of writers as brilliant and disparate as Max Frisch, Alain Robbe-Grillet, and Per Petterson. Fra Keeler is a compelling and humorously associative meditation on how 'one lives against one's dying, ' and how that living will be in contra-distinction to all that explains that death on paper after its fact. Would that more book groups read books of this complexity and intelligence; discussion would reach on into the wee hours!" --Michelle Latiolais

"In Fra Keeler a mind churns on itself, while reality--if it is reality--comes rushing at it with a strange stutter, everything a bit lost, a bit off, and ready to be ground up further by the uncertain perception of the narrator. This is a book by turns funny and strange, but always entertaining." --Brian Evenson

"Obsessive. Surreal. Darkly comic. Chilling." --Robert Coover