Kalotay's new novel is Blue Hours.
From her Q&A with Caroline Leavitt:
I always think writers are somehow haunted into writing their books—what was haunting you?Visit Daphne Kalotay's website.
At first, it was simply the ghost of New York City in the early 90’s—the struggles of that time (AIDS, the recession, the first Gulf War) along with the youthful energy and blithe naivete, which really does seem lost forever, swept away by the economic boom that put the city out of reach for young hopefuls and by, more broadly, 9/11 and our country’s wars in the Middle East. Then it was my dear friend Xavier, who works for the Red Cross, telling me his headquarters in Libya had been bombed; that was in 2012, less than a year before I heard on the news about an American serviceman being held by the Taliban. I started thinking about these two types of overseas work—military and humanitarian aid—and ideas for the book began to percolate.
What I loved so much about your book was how it zoomed from NYC to Afghanistan, from issues of race and class and how they impact our lives. This seems especially timely today.
I’m struck by the ways that...[read on]
The Page 69 Test: Sight Reading.
The Page 69 Test: Blue Hours.
--Marshal Zeringue