Description
Fiction. Winner of the Big Moose Prize. In CHILDREN AND LUNATICS, the 21st century is new and fragile, the center barely holding. Wars, terrorists, and hurricanes are on TV. A silent street person and a suburban mother share intimate spheres of love and grief and odd obsessions, although they barely meet. As their paths converge, an eerie world hovers, casting shadows and flickering lights, igniting fears and dreams.
"CHILDREN AND LUNATICS pieces together a nightmare landscape—the one we all live in. It's recognizable, strange, and subtly frightening. You can't lay this book aside unchanged."—Rick DeMarinis
"Megan McNamer's CHILDREN AND LUNATICS reminds us that madness is created by life's tragedies and that comfort is found in the most ordinary of places: every third house on a block, a chair, a thrift store purse, a cafe table. We are taken on a skillful journey full of mystery and sadness while being reminded that it is our connection to one another that keeps us from total despair. McNamer's two central characters are nameless, which means they might be anyone, they are our invisible neighbors, and our potential friends and saviors. There are acts of kindness and acts of violence in this book and I cared so much for the characters that I couldn't stop reading, and I couldn't stop hoping for their salvation."—Mary Jane Nealon
Author Bio
Megan McNamer grew up in northern Montana and studied music at the University of Montana and ethnomusicology at the University of Washington. HOME EVERYWHERE (Black Lawrence Press, 2018) is her second novel. Her first novel, CHILDREN AND LUNATICS (Black Lawrence Press 2016) won the Big Moose Prize. Essays and stories have appeared in Salon, Sports Illustrated, The Sun, Tropic Magazine (of The Miami Herald), Islands Magazine, Headwall, Cutthroat Magazine, and a number of anthologies, and have won awards from New Millennium, Glimmer Train, Writers@Work, the University of New Orleans Writing Contest for Study Abroad, Travelers' Tales Best Travel Writing Solas Awards for 2016, and Carve Magazine's Raymond Carver Short Story Contest for 2016. Megan lives in Missoula, Montana, and plays Balinese music with the community gamelan Manik Harum.
Author City: MISSOULA, MT USA