Posts tagged A Geography of Reading
Review of DREAMS UNDER GLASS in A Geography of Reading

I’m grateful to Isla McKetta for her thoughtful review of Dreams Under Glass, which she calls engrossing, fascinating, and touching. Here’s a fun excerpt:

I won’t reveal the major shift that happens toward the end of this book, only that there is one and that I’ll never think of the color turquoise quite the same way again.

Read the full review (plus a review of Dorthe Nors’s essay collection A Line in the World!) here.

DAUGHTERS OF THE AIR one of Bustle's 11 Best Fiction Books Releasing in December 2017

This morning, I was super excited to see Daughters of the Air included in Bustle's round up of best new fiction releasing in December. Huzzah!Reviews are coming in as well. Leena Soman of Cleaver Magazine calls Daughters of the Air "a clear-eyed meditation on the experience of being haunted by the unknown and what we are perhaps too scared to imagine.” In A Geography of Reading, Isla McKetta writes:

"...I want to read a book that pushes me so far beyond my own experience as a human and a writer that I’m already off the cliff and halfway to a crushing death before I realize what’s happening. Daughters of the Air took me there."

And, Elizabeth's Editions says “[Szilágyi] is a smart writer, dropping you straight into the white hot truth of life.” Yow!The novel releases in just four days. I hope to see you at the launch party this Tuesday at 7:30 at the Hotel Sorrento, or at one my events around the country in 2018!