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Book Cover for: Paradise Close, Lisa Russ Spaar

Paradise Close

Lisa Russ Spaar

Critic Reviews

Good

Based on 5 reviews on

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In 1971, orphan Marlise Schade--fourteen, anorectic, and evicted from the psychiatric hospital her trust fund can no longer support--finds herself alone in an ancestral home during a blizzard. Marlise's struggles to survive there become the focal point for a host of imperiled figures, living and dead, whose stories intersect with hers and with forces roiling the U.S. in the '70s.

Decades later, on the brink of Trump's America, sixty-something Tee Handel is shaken by an inexplicable visitation. For years he's nursed a deep hurt over his breakup with a captivating artist, spending his days and nights in solitude tinkering with antique clocks. What's become of the artist, and how Tee reacts to his mysterious guest, testifies to the risk and inexorability of change.

These two seemingly unrelated tales entwine to show how the wages of the past are always with us, as are the dangerous and redemptive consequences of secrets confided and withheld.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Persea Books
  • Publish Date: Mar 18th, 2025
  • Pages: NA
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.19in - 5.35in - 0.87in - 0.60lb
  • EAN: 9780892556137
  • Categories: LiteraryWomenMultiple Timelines

About the Author

Spaar, Lisa Russ: - Lisa Russ Spaar is the author of many collections of poetry, most recently Orexia (Persea, 2017), and a collections of essays, The Hide-and-Seek Muse: Annotations of Contemporary Poetry. She is the editor of Monticello in Mind: Fifty Contemporary Poems on Jefferson; Acquainted with the Night: Insomnia Poems; and All that Mighty Heart: London Poems. She is a poetry columnist for Los Angeles Review of Books and Professor of English at the University of Virginia.

Critics’ reviews

Praise for this book

"Part Beauty and the Beast, part monk meditation, part pulse-galloping thriller, part Salingeresque coming-of-age with an untamable femme lead, part intoxicated art school sex party, part goldenrod glow the morning after a storm--this novel illuminates how we can rescue others by allowing our own rescue."--Aimee Seu "Southeast Review"
"... a novel made of glass, possessing characteristics of both prose and poetry. It exists in that shifting, enviable in-between. This is a debut novel--'debut' is and isn't accurate--written by an author in possession of a singular ear for the ways one can stretch and shape the English language and decades of experience as a poet, critic, and teacher ... Although I admit to being predisposed to admiration, I write with a renewed sense of awe--for this author's mind, music, and embodied, compassionate characterization."--Nichole Lefebvre "The Adroit Journal" (10/11/2022 12:00:00 AM)
"...a poetic saga in which a woman's life affects, and is affected by, mental illness, loss, and love."--Eileen Gonzalez "Foreword Reviews"
"This breathtaking novel--from one of the most exquisite poets of our day--has the dark power of a fairy tale. I read it all in one sitting, in thrall to the spell Lisa Russ Spaar casts with her cast of complicated characters, a heartbreaking tribe of orphans, derelicts, and dreamers, all lost in deeply recognizable ways. I loved it."--Joanna Rakoff, author of My Salinger Year and A Fortunate Age
Lisa Russ Spaar's debut novel (how is this a debut novel?) is a soulful, sexy, extraordinarily lyrical meditation on things that matter--art, aging, love, desire, the body, and the brief, passionate encounters that bind us to each other and sometimes save our lives. Beginning with a fragile, tender-hearted teenage orphan and spiraling into an ever-growing universe of enchanting outcasts, Paradise Close is part romantic fantasy, part literary dreamscape, and always a luscious and rewarding encounter with language. If this is what happens when poets write novels, they should all write them.--Eleanor Henderson, author of "The Twelve-Mile Straight" and "Everything I Have Is Yours"
Kaleidoscopic and moving, Lisa Russ Spaar's debut novel Paradise Close seamlessly spans the decades of her singular characters' lives and their inextricable connections to one another. At the heart of this work is a convergence of secrets catalogued with longing. Spaar looks closely and intently at such fractured desires, piecing them back together, all while offering a culminating rush of heartbreak to the bloodstream.--Jon Pineda, author of "Let's No One Get Hurt"
"Ranging from the 1970s to the 2010s, this forthright and exuberant tour-de-force effectively plumbs a young woman's artistic and sexual awakening."-- "Library Journal"