Thirst: A Novel

Thirst: A Novel

by A. G. Mojtabai
Thirst: A Novel

Thirst: A Novel

by A. G. Mojtabai

eBook

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Overview

As A.G. Mojtabai's Thirst opens, Lena has been summoned to the bedside of her ailing "brother" Theo, an aging country priest who has started to refuse food and drink. What Lena faces is complicated by the fact that she left the faith long ago. First cousins and closest childhood friends, Theo and Lena were raised in a small Catholic farming community in Texas, named for the village their parents left behind in Germany, a place where all questions, asked and unasked, were answered for all time. The known world was bounded by the iron fence of the parish cemetery containing nearly all their dead. Beyond it lurked disorder, the dragons of unbelief. Now faced with the mysteries of mortality and loss, both are struggling to come to terms with the choices that have defined them. Thirst is a book hard to classify--a novella, certainly, but it is also in part a tone poem, a contemporary book of hours, and a meditation engaging issues of faith and doubt, death and healing. Roger Rosenblatt has said of A.G. Mojtabai: "It is rare to find a gorgeous stylist and a writer of substance yoked in the same artist. Her work shows heart and unsentimental kindness that leaves the reader enlightened and wiser."

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781639820894
Publisher: Slant Books
Publication date: 02/01/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 140
Sales rank: 804,731
File size: 624 KB

About the Author

A.G. Mojtabai is the author of twelve books. Among the honors she has received are a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Lillian Smith Award for the best book about the American South, and the Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She has taught at Harvard, New York University, and the University of Tulsa, and now lives in Amarillo on the High Plains of Texas where she too is waiting for rain.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"I'm amazed at what Mojtabai's done—so much so that I wished I'd written the book. Thirst will resonate with many who have lost a loved one and those with a terminal illness who are just learning how to die." —Ron Hansen, author of Hotly in Pursuit of the Real

"Spare, strange, and riveting, A. G. Mojtabai's Thirst is disturbing and consoling in equal measure. Like all her fiction, this short, intense novel of lost faith and chosen death is as perfectly formed, intricate, and mysterious as a flower. It is a beautiful meditation."
—Valerie Sayers, author of The Age of Infidelity and Other Stories

"The spare radiance of Mojtabai's Thirst illuminates a core of impenetrable obscurity. This beautifully written novella encompasses both the mundane and the mysterious, both the sparse outer details and the unreachable inwardness of the end of a life. To read Thirst is to experience clarity and obscurity, both evoked with dry wit and utter precision, as well as with the vividness of an elusive dream."
—Rachel Hadas, author of Strange Relation

"Scripture speaks of those who 'hunger and thirst after righteousness,' a phrase that takes on extra meaning during the Eucharist. To this spiritual theme Grace Mojtabai adds a less exalted sense for the title word, since the dying priest in this narrative becomes parched with a thirst that his sister tries to alleviate. Faced with harassments both physical and mental suffered by her brother, her ministering to them amounts to a sort of Eucharist as well. It's a sacrifice not sanctioned by orders and ritual, but very much in keeping with the Comforter's promise of support in times of trial. Mojtabai's bell-clear prose demonstrates, with admirable economy, how the sacramental infuses ordinary daily life. I am grateful to have read in advance a book that is sure to attain the status of a classic."
—Alfred Corn, author of Arks & Covenants

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