Grace

Backorder
Product Details
Price
$16.99  $15.80
Publisher
Gallery Books
Publish Date
Pages
288
Dimensions
5.4 X 8.4 X 0.7 inches | 0.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781440585753

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Calvin Baker is the author of the critically-acclaimed novels Naming the New World, Once Two Heroes, Dominion, and Grace, as well as the nonfiction book, A More Perfect Reunion. He has taught at Columbia University and the University of Leipzig, Germany. He lives in New York.
Reviews
"The plot moves along nicely and with strong direction as we follow Roland through relationships with various existentially driven women.... The story is engaging.... The meditation in Baker's novel is compelling, and it begs us to look closer, to inspire important conversations and richer dialogue, to make better connections with people and to hold those connections up for observation." --Bookslut

Praise for the work of Calvin Baker

"Global, personal, and finally transcendental, Grace involves us completely in its hero's extraordinary quest for meaning. Calvin Baker has written a wonderful and deeply affecting novel." --Joesph O'Neill, author of Netherland

"Calvin Baker works in a rarefied strain of literature whose practitioners include Faulkner and Morrison, Calvino and Cormack McCarthy: allegorists whose stories are tinged by parable and psalm even as their sensibility remains keenly attuned to the avant garde." --Dale Peck, author of Visions and Revisions and The Garden of Lost and Found

"In his long-waited and brilliant new novel, Grace, Calvin Baker offers us a soul-enlarging tale that blends exquisite language and profound insight in a way that only Baker could have written." --Jeffery Renard Allen, author of Song of the Shank

"Its veiled literary references--to J.M. Coetzee's 'Disgrace, ' Homer's 'wine-dark sea' and Jonathan Swift's Lemuel Gulliver...hint strongly at the flavor and scale of Baker's ambition.... Grace...take[s] you places you wouldn't expect to go, by the most serendipitous path imaginable." --The Chicago Tribune