Description
Co-op available Significant galley printing Tour will include bookstore appearances in the Boston area, Ann Arbor, and Ohio as well as university campus readings TBD Featured title at Book Expo America National print, public radio, and online campaigns targeting feature coverage in trade publications; NPR and public radio affiliate interviews; reviews and "Summer Books" preview coverage in all major newspapers, magazines, and Jewish-interest publication; reviews, author contributions, and giveaways through significant literary, speculative fiction, naturalist blogs, and animal rights specialty publications and blogs (note: the author is a dog-lover who has volunteered with Humane Society animal cruelty officers) Teacher's guide development and academic outreach, including Consortium subject catalog and Required Reading newsletter advertising and FYE/ Common Book program outreach (note: the author's personal academic connections as well as the book's connections to posthumanist, animal, and environmental studies should carry it beyond English and creative writing departments) Simultaneous eBook publication and promotion Promotion through Consortium's Bookslinger app and likely through the Storyville app Postcards available Giveaways through Goodreads and LibraryThing Promotion through BLP's website (www.blpress.org) and social media networks (Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, YouTube) Blurbs likely from Audrey Niffenegger, Anthony Doerr, E.O. Wilson, Frans de Waal, Marianne DeKoven, Olivia Judson, and Cary Wolfe Marketing and publicity efforts supported by Molly Mikolowski of A Literary Light
Reviews
International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award Longlist Orion Book Award Finalist O, The Oprah Magazine "Title to Pick Up Now" BuzzFeed "Book To Dive Into" Brooklyn Book Festival "Most Impressive Debut Novelist" Kenyon Review "Holiday Reading Recommendation" Publishers Weekly "First Fiction" & "Book of the Week" selection Library Journal "Top Indie Fiction" selection "This environmental fable as if Where the Wild Things Are had been written by Rachel Carson is a lyrical field guide . . . as well as a commentary on extinction and being alive." O, The Oprah Magazine "Muir astounded this reader. Liltingly physical, metaphorically sound, elusively knowing, her language is paint and clay and vibration." International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award Longlist citation, Hartford Public Library "[An] imaginative menagerie comes to life in [Muir's] novel Invisible Beasts." Sentinel-Tribune "Wonderful and unusual." Orion Magazine "Vividly portrayed." Locus "A wild and woolly hybrid that refreshingly defies classification. . . . Compelling throughout . . . it's the literary lovechild of Lewis Carroll and Rachel Carson filtered through the lens of zoology's godfather, Darwin himself." Bostonia "An imaginative, delightful field guide to animals that seem to be visible to only a few people including amateur naturalist and narrator Sophie. As her detailed descriptions of the fantastic creatures unfold, Sophie reveals a bit about human nature." Stanford Magazine "At once a celebration of the power of imagination and a requiem for the species we're losing every day. Both moving and often surprisingly funny, it's a seductive work of speculative naturalism that has its hands in the dirt and its head in the clouds." Kenyon Review "Brilliant. . . . With a light, witty, but heartwrenching touch, without preaching or hectoring in any form, Muir reveals, through the stories of her magnificent, funny, endearing invisible animals and their perils and extinctions, the anthropocentric obtuseness and mindless, casual as well as purposeful devastation of the environment and the mass slaughter of life forms, including ourselves, that puts all of us animals, vegetables, and minerals in dire peril." Women's Review of Books "Sensitive and elegant . . . funny and tender. . . . Beasts, a category used here in all its expansiveness, includes everything from the human to the microbe. This book is a wondrous testament to those relationships, interdependencies, and affinities. Invisible Beasts makes the bestiary a document of profoundly human dimensions, and offers to all readers, whether devotees of science or of fantasy, very real pleasures." io9 "An absolute delight. . . . This smart, whimsical novel takes readers not only into a world of 'invisible beasts' but into the mind of a charmingly quirky character." EcoLit Books "An erudite guidebook to the 'animals' that walk unseen among us." LitReactor "Full of language that is at once passionate and precise, flowery and full of information, [Invisible Beasts] is bursting at the seams with a strange duality, a dizzying mash-up of romanticism and science." Collagist "Lines blur between the human and animal worlds in this richly detailed debut. . . . In Sophie's struggles to find her footing in a world only she and a few others can see, Muir expertly pinpoints the frailty of the human condition. This is an amazing feat of imagination." Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Playfully and thoughtfully underlines the pain and loss of extinction . . . combin[ing] fact and imagination in 20 fables narrated by an amateur naturalist. . . . A marvelous capsule of natural history . . . not to mention crackling suspense." Kirkus Reviews "The various fantastical beings presented here are described in careful scientific detail with results that are weird, whimsical, and somewhat unsettling. Like very fractured Just So Stories." Library Journal "Invisible Beasts is a strange and beautiful meditation on love and seeing, a hybrid of fantasy and field guide, novel and essay, treatise and fable. With one hand it offers a sad commentary on environmental degradation, while with the other it presents a bright, whimsical, and funny exploration of what it means to be human. It's wonderfully written, crazily imagined, and absolutely original." ANTHONY DOERR, author of All the Light We Cannot See and The Shell Collector "In this twenty-first century, there's no one like Sharona Muir who can write, in bright accurate language, animals real or imaginary in an updated bestiary that riffs on evolution, extinction, and what it means to be human among other species. We need this view, and you'll be right there with her on every page of Invisible Beasts." JOHN FELSTINER, author of Can Poetry Save the Earth?: A Field Guide to Nature Poems "Invisible Beasts is a delightful and stunning feat of environmental imagination, endlessly enjoyable and fascinating. With the deep inventiveness of Ursula Le Guin and the quirky vitality of Annie Dillard, Sharona Muir seduces us into a cautionary world full of creatures, at once fanciful and utterly convincing, who hold unexpected lessons for ourselves." ROBERT FINCH, author of A Cape Cod Notebook and co-editor of The Norton Book of Nature Writing "Many writers are inspired by symbiology the interdependence of nature, culture, and technology but Muir's intelligence and breadth of knowledge are exceptional. You could not find a better little book of ethics, politics, and ecology for our time." REGENIA GAGNIER, author of The Insatiability of Human Wants and Individualism, Decadence and Globalization "If you've lost your capacity to wonder at the myriad forms of life swarming, burrowing, swooping, and gamboling around you and inside you then look no further. Equal parts science and imagination, Invisible Beasts takes us on a journey to another world that turns out to be our world, as if seen and experienced for the first time. If you're interested in what it means to be alive, and share life, then read this book." CARY WOLFE, author of Before the Law: Humans and Other Animals in a Biopolitical Frame and What is Posthumanism?
International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award Longlist Orion Book Award Finalist O, The Oprah Magazine "Title to Pick Up Now" BuzzFeed "Book To Dive Into" Brooklyn Book Festival "Most Impressive Debut Novelist" Kenyon Review "Holiday Reading Recommendation" Publishers Weekly "First Fiction" & "Book of the Week" selection Library Journal "Top Indie Fiction" selection "This environmental fable-as if Where the Wild Things Are had been written by Rachel Carson-is a lyrical field guide . . . as well as a commentary on extinction and being alive." -O, The Oprah Magazine "Muir astounded this reader. Liltingly physical, metaphorically sound, elusively knowing, her language is paint and clay and vibration." -International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award Longlist citation, Hartford Public Library "[An] imaginative menagerie comes to life in [Muir's] novel Invisible Beasts." -Sentinel-Tribune "Wonderful and unusual." -Orion Magazine "Vividly portrayed." -Locus "A wild and woolly hybrid that refreshingly defies classification. . . . Compelling throughout . . . it's the literary lovechild of Lewis Carroll and Rachel Carson filtered through the lens of zoology's godfather, Darwin himself." -Bostonia "An imaginative, delightful field guide to animals that seem to be visible to only a few people-including amateur naturalist and narrator Sophie. As her detailed descriptions of the fantastic creatures unfold, Sophie reveals a bit about human nature." -Stanford Magazine "At once a celebration of the power of imagination and a requiem for the species we're losing every day. Both moving and often surprisingly funny, it's a seductive work of speculative naturalism that has its hands in the dirt and its head in the clouds." -Kenyon Review "Brilliant. . . . With a light, witty, but heartwrenching touch, without preaching or hectoring in any form, Muir reveals, through the stories of her magnificent, funny, endearing invisible animals and their perils and extinctions, the anthropocentric obtuseness and mindless, casual as well as purposeful devastation of the environment and the mass slaughter of life forms, including ourselves, that puts all of us-animals, vegetables, and minerals-in dire peril." -Women's Review of Books "Sensitive and elegant . . . funny and tender. . . . Beasts, a category used here in all its expansiveness, includes everything from the human to the microbe. This book is a wondrous testament to those relationships, interdependencies, and affinities. Invisible Beasts makes the bestiary a document of profoundly human dimensions, and offers to all readers, whether devotees of science or of fantasy, very real pleasures." -io9 "An absolute delight. . . . This smart, whimsical novel takes readers not only into a world of `invisible beasts' but into the mind of a charmingly quirky character." -EcoLit Books "An erudite guidebook to the `animals' that walk unseen among us." -LitReactor "Full of language that is at once passionate and precise, flowery and full of information, [Invisible Beasts] is bursting at the seams with a strange duality, a dizzying mash-up of romanticism and science." -Collagist "Lines blur between the human and animal worlds in this richly detailed debut. . . . In Sophie's struggles to find her footing in a world only she and a few others can see, Muir expertly pinpoints the frailty of the human condition. This is an amazing feat of imagination." -Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Playfully and thoughtfully underlines the pain and loss of extinction . . . combin[ing] fact and imagination in 20 fables narrated by an amateur naturalist. . . . A marvelous capsule of natural history . . . not to mention crackling suspense." -Kirkus Reviews "The various fantastical beings presented here are described in careful scientific detail with results that are weird, whimsical, and somewhat unsettling. Like very fractured Just So Stories." -Library Journal "Invisible Beasts is a strange and beautiful meditation on love and seeing, a hybrid of fantasy and field guide, novel and essay, treatise and fable. With one hand it offers a sad commentary on environmental degradation, while with the other it presents a bright, whimsical, and funny exploration of what it means to be human. It's wonderfully written, crazily imagined, and absolutely original." -ANTHONY DOERR, author of All the Light We Cannot See and The Shell Collector "In this twenty-first century, there's no one like Sharona Muir who can write, in bright accurate language, animals real or imaginary in an updated bestiary that riffs on evolution, extinction, and what it means to be human among other species. We need this view, and you'll be right there with her on every page of Invisible Beasts." -JOHN FELSTINER, author of Can Poetry Save the Earth?: A Field Guide to Nature Poems "Invisible Beasts is a delightful and stunning feat of environmental imagination, endlessly enjoyable and fascinating. With the deep inventiveness of Ursula Le Guin and the quirky vitality of Annie Dillard, Sharona Muir seduces us into a cautionary world full of creatures, at once fanciful and utterly convincing, who hold unexpected lessons for ourselves." -ROBERT FINCH, author of A Cape Cod Notebook and co-editor of The Norton Book of Nature Writing "Many writers are inspired by symbiology-the interdependence of nature, culture, and technology-but Muir's intelligence and breadth of knowledge are exceptional. You could not find a better little book of ethics, politics, and ecology for our time." -REGENIA GAGNIER, author of The Insatiability of Human Wants and Individualism, Decadence and Globalization "If you've lost your capacity to wonder at the myriad forms of life swarming, burrowing, swooping, and gamboling around you-and inside you-then look no further. Equal parts science and imagination, Invisible Beasts takes us on a journey to another world that turns out to be our world, as if seen and experienced for the first time. If you're interested in what it means to be alive, and share life, then read this book." -CARY WOLFE, author of Before the Law: Humans and Other Animals in a Biopolitical Frame and What is Posthumanism?
Book Information
ISBN 9781934137802
Author Sharona Muir
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint Bellevue Literary Press
Publisher Bellevue Literary Press
Weight(grams) 226g