In Pisa, Italy, an Armenian immigrant named Marco Iprannossian sits in
jail awaiting judgment on the attempted murder of a local official.
The novel opens on the first day of his hearing--three years after his
arrest--and follows the lives of Marco, his friends on the outside, the
judge presiding over this case, her husband, and their teenage daughter,
Lea. Through deceptively structured as a crime novel, Quarry's real
concerns are both far smaller and far larger than those of a typical
whodunit.
Houdart's modern tale, presented in a series of brief, elliptical
snapshots, is a precision-cut gem of literary minimalism.