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South - by Richard Ploetz (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- A mosaic of grief, a lifetime of love and loss, rendered with the cadence of Hemingway and Denis Johnson A novel comprised of twenty-two discreet stories told by shifting narrators, South chronicles thirty years in the life of Bert, a writer attempting to reconcile his Romantic ambitions with his grief over the death of his mother, and his wife Trudy, a painter yearning to cement her place in a rapidly evolving American culture.
- About the Author: Richard Ploetz is a playwright, poet, and novelist.
- 300 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Literary
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Book Synopsis
A mosaic of grief, a lifetime of love and loss, rendered with the cadence of Hemingway and Denis Johnson
A novel comprised of twenty-two discreet stories told by shifting narrators, South chronicles thirty years in the life of Bert, a writer attempting to reconcile his Romantic ambitions with his grief over the death of his mother, and his wife Trudy, a painter yearning to cement her place in a rapidly evolving American culture.
Within their idyllic marriage, the fissures that were once obscured become evident as the couple grapples with the loss of their child in a premature birth. In the wake of this monumental loss, Bert and Trudy leave their hometown to live off the grid in rural Vermont, where the symptoms of unresolved grief begin to take their toll.
Over the next decade, Bert and Trudy's marriage steadily falters under the weight of monotony and unfulfilled ambition, and the American dream as lived by the two young idealists begins to lose its center. In an attempt to revitalize their youth, they depart to live as artists in 1980s New York City. As they struggle to come to terms with their persistent discontent--both with themselves and each other--the story delicately unfolds and, in the minutiae and depth of their experiences, articulates the neuroses of lives lived in quiet despair.
In South, Richard Ploetz provides what the American novel has been lacking for decades: a story about good people plagued by tragedy and the burdens of everyday life. In this devastating debut, Ploetz writes with intelligence and intoxicating honesty, reminding us of the essential beauty found not in righteousness or ambition, but in the complexity of the lives we live beneath our delicate ideals.
About the Author
Richard Ploetz is a playwright, poet, and novelist. He received an MFA in Fiction from Columbia University and studied playwriting at the Yale School of Drama. He has published short stories and poems in The Quarterly, Outerbridge, Crazy Quilt, Timbuktu, American Literary Review, Hayden's Ferry, and other literary magazines. Alongside writing plays, poetry, and fiction, Ploetz has also collaborated with the great comic book artist Clément Oubrerie on a children's book, The Kooken (Henry Holt & Co. 1992), and a cartoon series, Nedtoons. Ploetz's plays have been produced in New York City at the WPA Theater, Playwrights Horizons, Theater Genesis, LaMaMa ETC, Emerging Artists Theater, and Theater for the New City. Ploetz is a long-term writing instructor at the Lehman College Adult Learning Center. For additional information visit his website: www.richardploetz.com