Scott O'Connor's novels have been hailed as "astonishing" (Library
Journal), and "so insistently stirring, you want to lean in close to
catch every word" (The New York Times Book Review). Now, from the
author of Untouchable and Half World comes A Perfect Universe, a
piercingly emotional cycle of stories in the tradition of Jennifer
Egan's A Visit from the Goon Squad and Annie Proulx's Close Range.
Welcome to the often-overlooked corners of sun-bleached Los Angeles,
where a teenaged bicycle thief searches for a kidnapped boy, a young
musician emerges as the lone survivor of a building collapse, and an
aging actor faces the erasure of his past. There, far from the Hollywood
spotlight, we also meet two sisters locked in a destructive cycle of
memory and illness, coffee-shop regulars whose lives are torn apart by a
stunning moment of violence, and the desperate, fraudulent writer whose
fictions connect these unforgettable characters in subtle and surprising
ways.
Sharply observed, exhilaratingly paced, and beautifully written, A
Perfect Universe is a masterful exploration of growing up and growing
old, loss and longing, identity and deception, and the search for
redemption, humanity, and grace.