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Two friends are inexplicably drawn to a carnival-like -orchid garden. A man works obsessively on restoring a mansion he has inherited. An urban dweller is haunted by the echo of cries in the night. A traveler is lured by highway signs directing him to a place that he has always known. The stories in Home, the follow-up to Mark Macdonald's acclaimed novel Flat, feature characters searching for truth and clarity in a world that is sometimes deceptive, usually miraculous, and often inescapable. Full of dark compulsions and seemingly irrational tendencies, Home is a place where all is not as it seems: authority figures defy reality, and fate takes charge as life and death become mere observances. Informed by terminal illness and a trust in the wonders of the world, these stories are about anxiety, foreboding, and a sense of calm resignation and peace with matters beyond our control. An inventive, sometimes startling, work of fiction from a writer of formidable ability.--Globe & Mail These stories have the power to slip in and engrave lingering afterimages in the mind.--Quill & Quire Praise for Flat: Uncanny. . . . With a deadpan worthy of Kafka, and the eye of a satellite camera.--Lambda Book Report It's wonderful to read a novel and get such piercing insights from little things, described concisely.--Toronto Star Mark Macdonald is the book buyer for Little Sister's, Vancouver's legendary gay and lesbian bookstore. His work has appeared in numerous anthologies and publications, including Quickies 2 and Carnal Nation.
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I picked up this book of stories on a whim at the university bookstore after flipping through it, and it‰ЫЄs not bad, but eh, I was feeling picky when I read it‰ЫУit didn‰ЫЄt impress me. Maybe I‰ЫЄll read it again (another hour or two of my life? not such a sacrifice) when I‰ЫЄm feeling more generous.