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High Praise For
Jayne Anne Phillips'
SHELTER
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"Mesmerizing . . . the
physical world [of Shelter]—a
girls' camp in rural West Virginia—is
so thoroughly and beautifully evoked that within pages we're completely drawn
in . . . Phillips' previous novel,
Machine Dreams, and many of her finest short stories, deal with the
aching distances in the American family, and here she takes that theme one
step further, to the broken covenant between parents and their children."
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-The Washington Post
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"POWERFUL .
. . BRILLIANT . . . Phillips'
theme is the transition between childhood and adolescence. She writes it as
a legendary quest; a passage of exploits through dragons, demons and dangerous
enchantments, both within and without. . . . Transformation,
for Phillips, is the terror, magic and ordeal of what happens year by year
as we grow out of childhood. She has set her remarkable novel at the mysterious
crossroads where old safety, with its unexplained shadows, becomes more lethal
than new danger, with its fearsome ventures."
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- Los Angeles
Times Book Review
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"If she never writes another
novel, West Virginia-raised Jayne Anne Phillips can be satisfied, if artists
ever are, knowing that SHELTER IS A LITERARY MASTERPIECE.
Shelter has all the spare but precise and profound use of the language
that qualifies as top writing, the feel of early Cormac McCarthy and Phillips'
own short stories…."
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- Gannett News Service
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"LOOK HOMEWARD, ANGELS . . . Phillips is occasionally
plugged as a descendant of the Southern literary royals Eudora Welty and Flannery
O'Connor. She does share their strong sense of place and textured language,
and especially O'Connor's love of outcasts . . . but Phillips is decidedly
contemporary, and notable among her peers because she pairs her realism with
such thick sensory detail, in a tightly controlled investigation of the power
of memory and dreams to replace what years steal away."
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Italian
translation
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-The Nation
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"WE
COME AWAY FEELING AWED . . . Phillips, author of Fast Lanes, Machine
Dreams, and Black Tickets, is a writer of unusual, original talent." |
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- The Village Voice
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"Blending
the severity of a fallen archangel with the tenets of symbolism, Phillips has
produced astonishing imagery in Shelter, with a mystical sheen spanning the
reach between realism and a shimmery, fire-and-ice dimension that belongs to
Revelation . . . the propulsion of the novel is beautifully handled, with
Shelter rushing toward its inevitable conclusion with all the urgency
of a deer in flight. The inimitable Parson believes the voice in his head 'because
it's the truth, not because it's real,' and this absolute distinction is what
Shelter also accomplishes. . . . In Shelter, Jayne Anne Phillips
has gone into the garden and headed straight for the serpent's throat." |
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Spanish
translation
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-The Boston Globe
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"IN
LANGUAGE AND RHYTHMS AS CAREFULLY WROUGHT AS POETRY, PHILLIPS LAYERS SENSUAL
DETAIL ON DEEPLY FELT EMOTION." |
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-The Washington Post Book World
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"Ms.
Phillips has again put her finger on the collective (and racing) pulse . . .
The steamy West Virginia forest has such intensity that the book's pages almost
seem limp and dappled. In this ominous garden, she carefully plots a fall, a
confrontation with evil and with the desolation of family estrangement." |
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- The New York Times Book Review
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"A
suspenseful, beautifully patterned novel. . . . Anyone who appreciates empathetic,
fine writing that illuminates our deepest concerns can't afford to bypass Shelter" |
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French translation
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-The Boston Sunday Herald
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"Moving
rapidly back and forth among various points of view, Ms. Phillips constructs
an associative narrative that moves less by conventional plot than by theme,
motif and the subconscious workings of memory. . . . Her people come alive.
. . . By the end of Shelter we have come to care about them all, and
we are left shocked and drained by the violent tragedy that overtakes their
lives." |
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-The New York Times
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"Her
lustrous prose aside, in Shelter Phillips displays what may be
an even greater gift: a talent for creating abundantly complex characters that
nonetheless spring vividly from the page. This defiant, frighteningly beautiful
novel is as disturbing as its setting. Built to last, Shelter feels like
Phillips' bid for immortality." |
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-Harper's Bazaar
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"A
beautiful, intricate, abundantly mature new novel [Shelter] is mysterious, fill
of dark dreams, menace and the blind tug of sex. A Manichaean struggle takes
shape, good and evil in mortal combat, but the battle lines are not clearly
drawn. . . The danger is subtle and pervasive and Phillips builds the suspense
relentlessly. At the same time she asks (implicitly) questions that have
no answer: Can we protect each other? Where do we find shelter?" |
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-Mirabella
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"Written
in prose that is often breathtakingly beautiful, Shelter is a rich, vivid novel
of moral and psychological complexity destined to stand alongside works by Faulkner
and the other masters of Southern literature." |
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-Vanity Fair
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"TERRIFYING
DRAMA . . . Powerful and riveting." |
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-Library Journal
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"HAUNTING
... breaks new stylistic ground. . . Shelter rewards us with deep
insight into the human condition, conveyed in prose as lush, tangled and ultimately
nourishing as the woods in which Lenny, Cap, Alma, Delia and Buddy find their
redemption." |
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-The Cleveland Plain Dealer
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"A
TRUE LOSS-OF-INNOCENCE TALE . . . a work rich in understanding and depth,
unflinching in the face of evils we scarcely recognized in those supposedly
simpler days." |
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-Milwaukee Journal
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"Phillips
has shown herself capable of mixing the banal and the transcendent, the ugly
and the beautiful, until they become one reality, so apparently true one feels
one has lived it. Bellington, West Virginia, and its environs are her answer
to the Yoknapatawpha County of Faulkner . . . no one writing fiction in the
U.S. today comes near her for linguistic beauty and atavistic, almost reluctant,
wisdom." |
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-New Statesman & Society
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"A
DARK, RICHLY IMAGINED STORY OF EVIL CONFRONTING INNOCENCE . . . her prose
is highly charged yet tightly controlled, palpable with intense visual imagery
. . . the denouement, in which the main characters come together in a dramatic,
almost cinematic confrontation, reconfirms Phillips as a masterly writer." |
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-Publishers Weekly
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"A
VISUAL AND SUSPENSEFUL NOVEL." |
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-Vogue
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"A
CAPTIVATING WORK . . . Jayne Anne Phillips' writing doesn't just make you
thinkit makes you feel . . . with prose that assaults the senses like
a lover's touch . . . she's the perfect wordsmith for a story about sexual
awakening." |
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-The Sunday Oregonian
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"EXQUISITELY
CRAFTED . . . Phillips, whose previous novels have garnered great praise, surely
is working at the peak of her impressive ability . . . Phillips' voice in
Shelter is remarkable." |
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-The Wichita Eagle
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"Shelter,
which arrives ten years after the author's highly praised Machine Dreams,
is a rich, dark, mesmerizing experience . . . What may first appear to be
a story about lost innocence at a summer camp tales on almost mythic proportions
as the children go, both figuratively and literally, into a hellish underworld.
Their ability to find their way back out again is nothing short of glorious.
. . . And, if it is about nothing else, this extraordinary book is about hope." |
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-The Virginia Pilot and the Ledger Star
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©2000 J.A.Phillips - text & images
unless otherwise noted
© Nimworks Design - web site design
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