Scott O'Connor's novels have been hailed as "astonishing" (
Library Journal), and "so insistently stirring, you want to lean in close to catch every word" (
The New York Times Book Review). Now, from the author of
Untouchable and
Half World comes
A Perfect Universe, a piercingly emotional cycle of stories in the tradition of Jennifer Egan's
A Visit from the Goon Squad and Annie Proulx's
Close Range.
Welcome to the often-overlooked corners of sun-bleached Los Angeles, where a teenaged bicycle thief searches for a kidnapped boy, a young musician emerges as the lone survivor of a building collapse, and an aging actor faces the erasure of his past. There, far from the Hollywood spotlight, we also meet two sisters locked in a destructive cycle of memory and illness, coffee-shop regulars whose lives are torn apart by a stunning moment of violence, and the desperate, fraudulent writer whose fictions connect these unforgettable characters in subtle and surprising ways.
Sharply observed, exhilaratingly paced, and beautifully written,
A Perfect Universe is a masterful exploration of growing up and growing old, loss and longing, identity and deception, and the search for redemption, humanity, and grace.