Revue de presse :
“Harvor delivers a gorgeous sense of form, and an erotically charged atmosphere.”
–Hamilton Spectator
“A hypnotically compelling novel.”
–Saskatoon StarPhoenix
“[Harvor makes] observations of Chekhovian depth. You think you have it all figured out, only to discover that things are not at all what they seemed.”
–New Brunswick Reader
“A sophisticated, complex narrative....What Fay Weldon does so well in Britain, Harvor does equally well here, portraying with wry humour the worst aspects we try to keep hidden in ourselves....[Her] characters make us laugh as we respond to the biting accuracy of their depiction.”
–Calgary Herald
“Harvor writes beautifully, her language is hypnotic, with a sort of meditative lilt that encourages dreaming....Fascinating....”
–Fredericton Daily Gleaner
“A very moving book.”
–eye Weekly
“Declan Farrell is a Pied Piper of energy, a Shamanistic version of enchanter, alchemist, magician.”
–Ottawa Citizen
“Harvor provides us with a portrait of an intelligent, multi-faceted woman who is looking for the key that will unlock the door into a future that might be better than the present. Since we’re all junkies – addicted to ourselves, our lives, our dreams, and our experiences – meeting a fictional character like Claire may make us a bit more aware of how a desire for anything reflects Buddha’s second noble truth: that craving is the source of suffering.”
–Tone Magazine
Biographie de l'auteur :
Elisabeth Harvor is the highly acclaimed author of the national bestselling novel Excessive Joy Injures the Heart, and three collections of short fiction, If Only We Could Drive Like This Forever, Our Lady of All the Distances, and most recently Let Me Be the One, which was a finalist for the Governor General’s Award for Fiction. She is also the author of two poetry books, Fortress of Chairs, which won the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award, and The Long Cold Green Evenings of Spring.
Harvor was the winner of the Alden Nowlan Award for the year 2000. Her fiction has been anthologized in Canada, the U.S., and Europe, and has appeared in many periodicals, including The New Yorker, Saturday Night, Toronto Life, The Malahat Review, and The Hudson Review. Harvor has been writer-in-residence at universities and libraries across Canada, and has also taught in creative writing programs at Concordia University, York University, and the Humber School for Writers.
Elisabeth Harvor has two sons, and lives in Ottawa.
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