Browse Subject Headings
2023-2027 Monthly Planner 5 Years : Pretty Blue Flowers Cover Five Year Monthly Planner from January 2023 to December 2027 - 60 Months Calendar Agenda Schedule Organizer for Women Girls Mom
2023-2027 Monthly Planner 5 Years : Pretty Blue Flowers Cover Five Year Monthly Planner from January 2023 to December 2027 - 60 Months Calendar Agenda Schedule Organizer for Women Girls Mom
Click to enlarge
Author(s): Carr, Jonathan
ISBN No.: 9781250260666
Pages: 444
Year: 202303
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 26.21
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Carr's kaleidoscopic debut embroiders fact with fiction to tell an alternative history of Chicago's 19th century in a symphony of voices. Using real-life historical figures, colorful stories and fictional journal entries, Carr traces Chicago's rise to an industrial titan and all-time great American city. -- USA Today Make Me a City is.a wondrous, bold and playful first novel. Seductively fascinating characters, real and imagined, populate this fiction with their interweaving and intergenerational stories. -- The Saturday Paper There is much of the panache of David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas here: it is an epic story.A notably rich, rewarding read. --Daily Mail Online Impressive.


Carr effectively weaves the stories of his sprawling cast of minor and major figures to underscore the city's myriad threads of development: economic, political, social. An ambitious literary debut that occupies a liminal space between alternative history and experimental literature. -- Library Journal The rise of Chicago in the 19th century provides the frame for a trove of colorful stories and characters in this entertaining debut novel.Carr has a sure touch, and in many extended anecdotes, his narrative skills show exceptional detail, pacing, and tension. A solid storyteller enlivens a rich patch of American history. -- Kirkus Make Me a City is a thrillingly ambitious and ingeniously accomplished first novel. This is a stunning debut by a new and instantly important literary voice. --Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer-winning author of A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain Make Me a City 's scope and scale is quite breathtaking.


It digs deep into the history of Chicago to uncover hidden stories about the people who built the city, and its clever way of dealing with competing historical narratives is very exciting. A real pleasure to read! --Gerard Woodward, author of Booker Prize shortlisted I'll Go to Bed at Noon Absolutely magnificent. Carr grasps the complexity of a city's history, the individuals who shape it, those who gain and those who suffer. The prose is graceful and vibrant, the gradual unfolding of the interrelated lives of these people is superbly done. This is an elegant, richly enjoyable book. --Tricia Wastvedt, author of The River Make Me a City is a multitude of novels all rolled into one -- a wonderfully sprawling epic about Chicago's founding fathers (and mothers), a searching exploration of colonialism in action, and a compelling collection of stories about people and places. But it is something else too, the one thing that is known to all of us, namely a single, tender map of the human heart. In Make Me a City Jonathan Carr draws on his considerable talent to tell the story of Chicago through the eyes of its many inhabitants, exploring life, death and what is left behind with admirable deftness and style.


This is a bold, thrilling debut from a seriously good writer. --Francesca Rhydderch, author of The Rice Paper Diaries Jonathan Carr's brilliant novel could not be more relevant to today's world. Make Me a City explores the nature of history itself -- both the official record and the suppressed stories that lie beneath. Covering a century, from mid-western wilderness to the bustling modern city of Chicago, it has a correspondingly large cast, but incidents and characters are interwoven to create not just a satisfying narrative but a working model of how civilization comes into being, for better or worse. This novel itself is a city, one that contains the myriad hopes, ambitions, disappointments and loves of its citizens, as they work like coral insects to build the structure in which they live and die. --Richard Francis, author of The Old Spring and Crane Pond.


To be able to view the table of contents for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
To be able to view the full description for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
Browse Subject Headings