Synopses & Reviews
In the Valley of the Kingsmarks the extraordinary debut of Terrence Holt, who fifteen years ago abandoned a promising writing career to practice medicine. Moved by his patients" valor in the face of death, seeking to comprehend the mysteries revealed at their bedside, Holt has taken up fiction again. He emerges now with this astonishing collection of one novella and seven short stories that explore the farthest reaches of the imagination in a style that recalls the nineteenth-century American masters.
Holt leaps across genres and millennia, from small-town America to deep space, daring his readers to journey with him into realms as mysterious as they are unforgettable. The opening story, "â,' is a chilling account of the last days of the human race, as the hospitalization of a little girl in a New England town heralds a terrifying plague, transmitted not by a microbe but by a single word. The final story, 'Apocalypse,' returns to small-town New England and another vision of the end, in an intimate account of how a couple struggles to live and love under the shadow of the Earth"s approaching doom. In between, these stories range from outer space, where'"in 'Charybdis"an astronaut alone on a doomed NASA mission comes to terms with his fate, to the Egyptian desert of the title novella, where an archaeologist seeks a fabulous tomb that holds the secret of immortality. Painting with lurid colors and finely crafted prose, Holt offers his readers haunting visions of the reefs and abysses of the human imagination. In the Valley of the Kings redefines the art of the story, throwing aside the rules in search of the enduring truths that ultimately make stories worth reading.
Review
" does what all great story collections should: it challenges the mind while opening the spirit. Each of these short pieces sets a haunting scenario outside the ordinary realm--men traveling in space, or excavating the tombs of ancient Egyptian kings, or living through an apocalypse. The characters are all faced with mysteries to solve, but it is Terrence Holt's careful exploration of the loneliness and obsession these men harbor that elevates this book, in all its uniqueness and beauty. Long after a reader finishes these stories, they will be puzzling and thinking and dreaming of the worlds Terrence Holt has created." Hannah Tinti, author of The Good Thief
Synopsis
"One of the finest American writers alive . . . he is Melville + Poe + Borges but with a heart far more capacious."--Junot Díaz
Synopsis
'This is the secret book at the heart of American letters. Holt is one of the finest American writers alive."Junot Daz
Synopsis
Praise for In the Valley of the Kings
'Holt is my favorite writer. There is no one in the wide sea of English who writes like him, no one so profoundly, mysteriously, so searingly human, and so implacably apocalyptic. He is Melville + Poe +Borges but with a heart far more capacious. He seems to have leapt out of nowhere, massive, familiar, strange, and he never fails to blow my mind."Junot Daz, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, from Bookforum
'Terrence Holt"s prose is deeply original, evocative, transforming. I have never seen anything quite like it before. Though what I"m praising is not words, nor is it narrative, but something that is a compound of language, story, feeling, and knowledge'"and something else. Something beyond his learning as a physician, at once metaphysical and physical, mysterious and terrifying, but not indulgent. Even undecipherable. He is amazing."Gerald Stern, winner of the National Book Award for This Time
'Like the tales of Poe and Hawthorne, these stories are claustral, eerie, and entirely exhilarating."Michael Gorra, Smith College
'In The Valley of the Kingsis a work of terrific intelligence and terrifying imagination."Aleksandar Hemon, finalist for the National Book Award for The Lazarus Project
'Rare wonderful stories, beautifully crafted and strangely surreal without being merely cerebral '" a very fine first book."Peter Matthiessen , winner of the National Book Award for Shadow Country
Synopsis
Praised for his "beautifully crafted and strangely surreal" (Peter Matthiessen) stories, Terrence Holt had been operating under the literary radar for more than fifteen years, placing award-winning stories in such noted journals as , , and . With the release of this debut collection, Holt's work takes its "rightful place besides those works of genius--fiction, philosophy, theology--unafraid of axing into our iced hearts" (William Giraldi, ). Whether chronicling a plague that ravages a New England town or the anguish of a son who keeps his father's beating heart in a jar, Holt's stories oscillate between the rational and the surreal, the future and the past, masterfully weaving together reality and myth. Like Poe or Hawthorne, "Holt is a gifted wordsmith, his sentences carefully shaped and often beautiful, and he spins these ancient, irresolvable dilemmas in an elegiac poetry" ().
About the Author
Terrence Holt taught literature and writing at Rutgers University and Swarthmore College for a decade before attending medical school. Many of these stories have appeared in different forms in literary journals and prize anthologies, including the Kenyon Review, TriQuarterly, Zoetrope, Bookforum, and the O. Henry Prize Stories. A contributing editor for Men’s Health, Holt teaches and practices medicine at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.