Praise for Island of the Mad "If there is one thing to take away from the powerful collage of allusions, imagery, and lyricism in Laurie Sheck''s Island of the Mad , it is the fundamental importance of human connection. The book foregrounds longed-for and missed connections, half-hearted and tenuous ones, imagined ones, and so many others. As the novel illustrates, even as life takes its unexpected and painful turns, scarring us, stripping off parts of who we are, we persist in our search for connections, which nourish us at moments of greatest need . Indeed, there is no better evidence for art''s capacity to foster connections than Sheck''s own warm and lyrical narrative." -- Los Angeles Review of Books "A poetic meditation on Russian literature, bubonic plague, Venice, and the multiverse. [T]here''s a rhythmic force to Sheck''s repeated tropes."-- Kirkus "[ Island of the Mad ] reads like a lucid dream.Sheck pulls readers through the time-worm canals of Venice on a literary romp that will please fans of the historical and the fantastic alike.
" -- Publishers Weekly "Sheck returns with a gorgeously written work that layers together strands of history in one bravura act.A dizzyingly inventive work that reveals a strong sense of human connectedness; highly recommended for anyone who doesn''t want just plot."-- Library Journal "[P]oet and poetic novelist Sheck draws on classic works [.] to create an exquisitely intricate and moving literary pastiche.In concise, haunting, inquisitive, and incantatory passages, Sheck imaginatively and compassionately explores the mysteries of the body and mind, of brokenness and aloneness, while celebrating language as a lifeline across pain, time, and space."-- Booklist "The entire time, [the book] took my breath away. With a simple sentence, Sheck brings into sharp relief concepts that I''ve never thought to question or contemplate. Island of the Mad is gorgeously written and full of moments of deep introspection and speculation.
Dark, mysterious, poetic and utterly confounding. To read it is to feel one is attempting to swim through muddied waters - muddied waters that contain necessary truths. Waters that, once you emerge from the other side, you are grateful for having been allowed entrance into them."-- The PostScript "Laurie Sheck is a true American original, and Island of the Mad is a remarkable hybrid text that at once pushes the boundaries of literary fiction and poetry and speaks to the reader with tremendous insight and compassion about human suffering and survival. At once wise and thrilling, beautiful and challenging, mysterious and inviting, Sheck''s work cuts to the heart of all that is most challenging and wondrous about human experience. To read Island of the Mad is to have ''felt the world touch'' us - as the narrator puts it - ''with its strange, unpredictable hand.'' And what else could we want of literature but this?"-- Meghan O''Rourke, author of The Long Goodbye, A Memoir and Once "Laurie Sheck''s The Island of the Mad is nothing short of brilliant. Its hybrid form hovers between poetry and fiction; grounded in a deep understanding of the past it is also perfectly contemporary in its idioms and concerns.
This is ambitious, cutting edge work, both intimate and daringly literary at once. Laurie Sheck is an American Original."-- Lewis Hyde, author of The Gift "Laurie Sheck''s The Island of the Mad plunges into language like a silken dagger, removing us to plague years and haunted mysteries that might just remind us of contemporary lives and dreams. An amazing, exhilarating read that creates its own maze and accompanies the reader deeper and deeper into a miraculous world." --Jayne Anne Phillips, author of Quiet Dell and Machine Dreams "Laurie Sheck is a thrilling, original writer whose work has only gotten more ambitious and layered with each successive book. Her latest project, an unfolding trilogy, was launched by the remarkable and much-praised A Monster''s Notes , a hybrid, ramifying reckoning with Frankenstein, romanticism, and much else. Her current book, Island of the Mad , brings us to yet another stunning, unpredictable zone. An ambitious, significant work is unfolding before us: volume three, invoking the filmmaker R.
W. Fassbinder, will conclude this writer''s unusual orchestration of philosophical inquiry, narrative, archival intuition, and poetic brio."--Maureen N. McLane, National Book Critics Circle Nona Balakian Award for Excellence in Book Reviewing and author of My Poets "Laurie Sheck is one of the most gifted and original writers at work today; I don''t know of another who so deftly combines the poet''s lyricism, the novelist''s grasp of character and suspense, and the scholar''s love of historical detail. Her previous and path-breaking book, A Monster''s Notes , was unlike anything I''d ever read, haunting and exhilarating. Her latest, the dream-like and mysterious Island of the Mad , is, if anything, even more powerful and moving--and is a book that will be treasured and taught for many years to come." --James Shapiro, author of The Year of Lear: Shakespeare in 1606 & winner of the Samuel Johnson Prize for his book 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare "Compelling, mysterious and hard to shake.utterly one of a kind.
" --Junot Diaz, author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao.