From Publishers Weekly
Although the title makes this sound like a mystery, it is a knowing and witty take on family ties, the politics of art and academia, and eco-terrorism. When art history graduate student Lynn Fleming finds out that Wylie, her younger brother, is missing—or at least hasn't been heard from and can't be located—Lynn returns home to Albuquerque to try to find him. Since she left to go to school in New York, she has become a confirmed New Yorker, and the thought of Albuquerque, "the capital of nowhere," makes her shudder, though she reluctantly appreciates Duke City's "scruffy charm." When someone in Albuquerque tells her, "I don't know anybody like you," she "almost choked in exasperation. New York, I wanted to say, was full of people exactly like me." Lynn finds Wylie easily and, in the process, strikes up a romance with Angus, one of Wylie's partners in eco-crime, a sunny and charming plumber whose darker side is gradually revealed. As the schemes of the group Angus leads get riskier and more dangerous, Lynn finds herself becoming involved with their actions and sympathizing with their philosophy, but not their methods or zeal. An interesting subplot about a Mew Mexican woman artist, whose work becomes fodder for Lynn's doctoral dissertation, is woven believably into the narrative. This promising debut is intelligent, insightful and often bitterly funny.
Agent, Amy Williams at Collins McCormick. (May 6)Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
In Ohlin's mischievously smart and highly entertaining debut, a family struggles to realign itself around the negative space created by the unexpected death of the charmingly dissolute narrator's scientist father. Lynn fled Albuquerque to study art history in New York, but things aren't going too well. So when her obsessively neat travel-agent mother calls, worried sick over Lynn's brother, Wylie, Lynn agrees to come home for the summer, unaware of how bizarre things are. Lynn's mother is openly involved with a man whose wife is suffering a curiously stylish form of mental disability. Wylie, dismayed by Albuquerque's sprawl and wasteful water consumption, has hooked up with a group of dumpster-diving eco-warriors, including a sexy, nihilistic plumber, with whom Lynn gets erotically involved. She also happens upon the work of an unknown woman artist whose tragic story may save her floundering academic career. Electric with unusual and sharply delineated characters, madcap yet purposeful misadventures, ready irony, and incisive ecological insights, Ohlin's lithe and intriguing tragicomedy reveals the vulnerability of both the psyche and the earth.
Donna SeamanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.