Marten's powerful novel focuses on a man trying to put the shards of
his life together...Fans of Chuck Palahniuk and Jim Thompson, in
particular, should take note. --Roberta Johnson, Booklist (starred
review)
Eugene Marten's In the Blind takes readers through a keyhole and shows
it to be a tunnel, a cave -- a way through to a hard-earned light. The
speaker in this astonishing novel has been released from the boiler room
dark of prison, but he is not free. He must move on at an angle against
all that has been subtracted from the world he returns to, and always
against the bleak weight of memory. By accident he finds work in a
locksmith's shop, and something in the dark inner spaces of the locks
speaks to him of a universe of locks, and to the prospect of a
concentration that will open the way to breathable air.
With the uncanny precision of observation found in Cormac McCarthy's
Suttree, and the eerie mystery of Don Delillo's The Body Artist,
Marten generates a narrative that enthralls. When released by the book's
amazing close, readers will find themselves in the new light cast by
this novel, and with a hunger for more of Eugene Marten's fine work.