Publisher Description
Andre Dubus III's first novel in a decade is a masterpiece of thrilling tension and heartrending empathy. Few writers can enter their characters so completely or evoke their lives as viscerally as Andre Dubus III. In this deeply compelling new novel, a father, estranged for the worst of reasons, is driven to seek out the daughter he has not seen in decades. Daniel Ahearn lives a quiet, solitary existence in a seaside New England town. Forty years ago, following a shocking act of impulsive violence on his part, his daughter, Susan, was ripped from his arms by police. Now in her forties, Susan still suffers from the trauma of a night she doesn't remember, as she struggles to feel settled, to love a man and create something that lasts. Lois, her maternal grandmother who raised her, tries to find peace in her antique shop in a quaint Florida town but cannot escape her own anger, bitterness, and fear. Cathartic, affirming, and steeped in the empathy and precise observations of character for which Dubus is celebrated, Gone So Long explores how the wounds of the past afflict the people we become, and probes the limits of recovery and absolution.
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“Like Dubus’s best-selling memoir, Townie, which recounted his difficult childhood, this novel explores male violence and its repercussions. Its protagonist is an ex-convict hoping to make amends with his estranged daughter as he faces his own mortality.”
—
New York Times Book Review
About Andre Dubus
Andre Dubus III is
the author of the highly acclaimed, award-winning memoir Townie, a New York Times
bestseller, and of the #1 New York Times bestseller
House of Sand and Fog. Townie made the list of the best books
of 2011 for Esquire, Salon, Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble,
Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, Kirkus Reviews, Washington
Examiner, and AudioFile. House of Sand and Fog, the basis for an
Academy Award–nominated motion picture, was a fiction finalist for the National
Book Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, a Book Sense Book of the Year,
and an Oprah Book Club selection. His other works include a collection of short
fiction, The Cage Keeper and Other
Stories, and the novels Bluesman
and The Garden of Last Days. His work
has been included in The Best American
Essays of 1994 and The Best Spiritual
Writing of 1999. He has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Pushcart
Prize, the National Magazine Award for fiction, and was a finalist for the Rome
Prize Fellowship from the Academy of Arts and Letters. A member of PEN American
Center, Dubus has served as a panelist for the National Book Foundation and the
National Endowment for the Arts, has taught writing at Harvard, Tufts, and
Emerson College, and is currently a full-time faculty member at the University of
Massachusetts, Lowell. He is married to the performer Fontaine Dollas Dubus. They
live in Massachusetts with their three children.