Synopses & Reviews
Review
Praise for
Mother and Child"This plotless but not directionless novel beautifully contemplates the treachery of the world that motherhood exposes, and the child's ignorance of it."Publisher Weekly
Praise for The Art Lover
The tough-mindedness, originality and wit of her perceptions are intoxicating.” Publishers Weekly
By giving the conflicts in her life a fictional context, she tries to bring order and beauty and some degree of understanding to chaos.” Library Journal
Fully coherent, moving and elegiac, a genuine consolation. The New York Times Book Review
Heartbreakingly perfect...A dazzling second book and an almost impossible act to follow. San Francisco Chronicle
Praise for Room Lit by Roses:
In lush, elliptical language, Maso charts her first experience with pregnancy and new motherhood in a journal that reads like prose poetry, couching the mysterious experience in surprising forms, syntaxes and imagery
her dreamlike treatment of pregnancy, birth, mothering and writing should enchant mothers, mothers-to-be and writers with a poetic bent.” Publishers Weekly
Synopsis
A mediation on life and death, being and non-being, and the intense mystery and beauty of existence, Masos new novel follows a mother and child as they roam through wondrous and increasingly dangerous psychic and physical terrain A great wind comes, an ancient tree splits in half and a bat, or is it an angel, enters the house where the mother and child sleep, and in an instant a world of relentless change, of spectacular consequences, of submerged memory, and uncanny intimations is set into motion.
It is as if a veil has lifted, and what was once hidden is now in plain sight in all its splendor and terror as the mother and child are asked to bear enormous transformations and a terrible wisdom almost impossible to fathom. As the outside can no longer be separated from the inside, nor dream from reality, the mother and child continue, encountering along the way all kinds of characters and creatures as they move through a surreal world of grace and dread to the end.
The bond between Mother and Child is untouchable, unrealizable until it is lost, and this meditation pushes the envelope, inching ever closer to touching it, to realizing it.
Synopsis
A literary mediation on life and death, being and non-being, and the intense mystery and beauty of existence between a mother and child.
"Heartbreakingly perfect" (San Francisco Chronicle), Maso's moving, dreamlike novel follows a mother and child as they roam through wondrous and increasingly dangerous psychic and physical terrain. A great wind comes, an ancient tree splits in half, and a bat, or possibly an angel, enters the house where the mother and child sleep, and in an instant a world of relentless change, of spectacular consequences, of submerged memory, and uncanny intimations is set into motion. What was once hidden is now in plain sight in all its splendor and terror as the mother and child are asked to bear enormous transformations and a terrible wisdom almost impossible to fathom. As the outside can no longer be separated from the inside, nor dream from reality, the mother and child continue, encountering along the way all kinds of characters and creatures as they move through a surreal world of grace and dread to the end.
"The tough-mindedness, originality and wit of her perceptions are intoxicating."--Publisher Weekly
"By giving the conflicts in her life a fictional context, she tries to bring order and beauty--and some degree of understanding--to chaos."--Library Journal
"Fully coherent, moving and elegiac, a genuine consolation." --The New York Times Book Review
About the Author
Carole Maso is the author of seven books including The Art Lover, Ghost Dance, and Break Every Rule. She is a professor of English at Brown University.