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Dreamers of the Day
A Novel
(Thorndike Press, 2008)
I suppose I ought to warn you at the outset that my present circumstances are puzzling, even to me. Nevertheless, I am sure of this much: My little story has become your history. You won-t really understand your times until you understand mine.
So begins the account of Agnes Shanklin, the charmingly diffident narrator of Mary Doria Russell-s compelling new novel, Dreamers of the Day. And what is Miss Shanklin-s -little story?- Nothing less than the creation of the modern Middle East at the 1921 Cairo Peace Conference, where Winston Churchill, T. E. Lawrence, and Lady Gertrude Bell met to decide the fate of the Arab world-and of our own.
A forty-year-old schoolteacher from Ohio still reeling from the tragedies of the Great War and theinfluenza epidemic, Agnes has come into a modest inheritance that allows her to take the trip of a lifetime to Egypt and the Holy Land. Arriving at the Semiramis Hotel just as the Peace Conference convenes, Agnes, with her plainspoken American opinions-and a small, noisy dachshund named Rosie-enters into the company of the historic luminaries who will, in the space of a few days at a hotel in Cairo, invent the nations of Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, and Jordan.
Neither a pawn nor a participant at the conference, Agnes is ostensibly insignificant, and that makes her a welcome sounding board for Churchill, Lawrence, and Bell. It also makes her unexpectedly attractive to the charismatic German spy Karl Weilbacher. As Agnes observes the tumultuous inner workings of nation-building, she is drawn more and more deeply into geopolitical intrigue and toward a personal awakening.
With prose as graceful and effortless as a seductive float down the Nile, Mary Doria Russell illuminates the long, rich history of the Middle East with a story that brilliantly elucidates today-s headlines. As enlightening as it is entertaining, Dreamers of the Day is a memorable, passionate, gorgeously written novel.
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A Thread of Grace
(Random
House, 2005)
Set in Italy
during the dramatic finale of World War II, this new novel is the first in
seven years by the bestselling author of The Sparrow and Children of God.
It is September 8, 1943, and fourteen-year-old Claudette Blum is learning
Italian with a suitcase in her hand. She and her father are among the
thousands of Jewish refugees scrambling over the Alps toward Italy, where
they hope to be safe at last, now that the Italians have broken with Germany
and made a separate peace with the Allies. The Blums will soon discover that
Italy is anything but peaceful, as it becomes overnight an open battleground
among the Nazis, the Allies, resistance fighters, Jews in hiding, and
ordinary Italian civilians trying to survive.
Mary Doria Russell sets her first historical novel against this dramatic
background, tracing the lives of a handful of fascinating characters.
Through them, she tells the little-known but true story of the network of
Italian citizens who saved the lives of forty-three thousand Jews during the
war’s final phase. The result of five years of meticulous research, A Thread
of Grace is an ambitious, engrossing novel of ideas, history, and marvelous
characters that will please Russell’s many fans and earn her even more.
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Children of
God
(Hardcover: Villard, 1998)
(Paperback: Fawcett Books, 1999)
Mary Doria Russell's debut
novel, The Sparrow, took us on a journey to a distant planet and into the center
of the human soul. A critically acclaimed bestseller, The Sparrow was chosen as
one of one of Entertainment Weekly's Ten Best Books of the Year, a finalist for
the Book-of-the-Month Club's First Fiction Prize and the winner of the James M. Tiptree
Memorial Award. Now, in Children of God, Russell further establishes herself as
one of the most innovative, entertaining and philosophically provocative novelists writing
today.
The only member of the original mission to the
planet Rakhat to return to Earth, Father Emilio Sandoz has barely begun to recover from
his ordeal when the Society of Jesus calls upon him for help in preparing for another
mission to Alpha Centauri. Despite his objections and fear, he cannot escape his past or
his future.
Old friends, new discoveries and difficult questions
await Emilio as he struggles for inner peace and understanding in a moral universe whose
boundaries now extend beyond the solar system and whose future future lies with children
born in a faraway place.
Strikingly original, richly plotted, replete with
memorable characters and filled with humanity and humor, Children of God is an
unforgettable and uplifting novel that is a potent successor to The Sparrow and a
startlingly imaginative adventure for newcomers to Mary Doria Russell's special literary
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 The Sparrow
(Hardcover: Villard, 1996)
(Paperback: Fawcett Books, 1997)
The Sparrow, an astonishing
literary debut, takes you on a journey to a distant planet and to the center of the human
soul. It is a story of a charismatic Jesuit priest and linguist, Emilio Sandoz, who leads
a twenty-first-century scientific mission to a newly discovered extraterrestrial culture.
Sandoz and his companions are prepared to endure isolation, hardship and death, but
nothing can prepare them for the civilization they encounter, or for the tragic
misunderstanding that brings the mission to a catastrophic end. Once considered a living
saint, Sandoz returns alone to Earth physically and spiritually maimed, the mission's sole
survivor--only to be accused of heinous crimes and blamed for the mission's failure.
In clean, effortless prose and with captivating
flashes of wit, Russell creates memorable characters who navigate a world of exciting
ideas and disturbing moral issues without ever losing their humanity or humor. Both
heartbreaking and triumphant, and rich in literary pleasures great and small, The
Sparrow is a powerful and haunting book. It is a magical novel, as literate as The
Name of the Rose, as farsighted as The Handmaid's Tale and as readable as The
Thorn Birds.
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