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Gentle soul. This is our wonderful English Setter, Argentina, at 15+ years old. She died on June 23, 2004 at home, in our arms.
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Donadio & OlsonMy agent: Carrie Howland
Beyond the Margins Lessons in patience and craft
Fiction Studio booksMy innovative, fine publisher, helmed by publishing veteran Lou Aronica
Grub StreetPremier center for writers
Shoreline, a short story Published in The Northeast Corridor. Avail. on Kindle
LitPark's fabulous founder, Susan Henderson, interviews me.We discuss my writing, how I survived a fatal illness, how I survived rejections and few other writerly things.
Hay FeverBoston Globe article about a salvaged barn bought off eBay
Design New England Magazine cover storyThis Vermont cottage will inspire you for its architecture, art and design.
Agni magazine I interview Ha Jin about language and writing.
Boston Globe Living Arts feature Bestselling author, Doug Preston, is trapped in his own, real-life thriller.
Boston Globe feature on MJ Rose and lit blogsBelieve it or not, just a few years ago I needed to explain what a blog was!! Those were the days.
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July 12, 2009
Tags:
Stories about Home
If you're home-obsessed or on a perpetual search to find your true home--whatever that means to you and it can mean an infinite number of things--then shoot over to my blog and share your stories with me. Click on photo to get there. I also write about books, authors, and (more…)
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About Night Swim
"Keener’s observations perfectly capture a certain kind of 1970s adolescence: the adults who tried too hard, the sudden appearance of a joint when in the presence of older cousins, the way a grownup party could spin from fun to disturbing in a blink. Most exhilaratingly, she taps into the thrilling moments when a girl of 16 can see her future, whether in music or books or a boy’s smile. Sarah watches her mother’s rose garden after her death. Like her children, some “bloomed haphazardly while some wilted,’’ a living symbol of what goes on, no matter what."
"Like the adults in Rick Moody’s “Ice Storm,” the central couple in this novel of 1970s suburbia are remote alcoholics. “Love was something distant that retired to a room on the second floor,” Sarah, the 16-year-old narrator, says, referring to her stay-at-home yet absentee mother. This is a woman who makes a divot in the soil for her drink glass while tending her roses...This earnest debut centers on Sarah as she tunnels through new depths of loneliness...moving."
Keener is a big talent with a particular knack for detail and a finely tuned ear...she gives us a story that makes us cringe and lurch, laugh and, literally, weep. Her writing is never obvious, yet her lyrical prose will wow you. Even when describing the seemingly ordinary, Keener injects poetry. Sarah’s explorations allow readers to examine their own relationship with truth, sorrow, loss, longing and joy. Readers will be glad they dove into Night Swim.
"Jessica Keener's debut novel Night Swim is a masterfully told tale. Dysfunctional family dynamics are revealed in language evocative and honest, and her characters so well-drawn they could be our own kin.
The emotional depth of this novel has me constantly recommending it to friends in book clubs."
"Set in 1970's Boston high-society, Night Swim tells the tale of the Kunitz family, who hide their deep tensions behind a shimmering facade of parties and affluence before tragedy breaks their stable dance."
(Brookline Booksmith)
Feature articles
About a hundred feature articles published in The Boston Globe and other national magazines. Google my name as Jessica Keener or Jessica Brilliant Keener
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