> The
L Magazine's Best of the Independent Press.
> Las
Vegas City Life's Top Ten Books of the Year.
> Bluestalking
Reader's Best Reads of 2007.
> The
Emerging Writers' Network's year-end-mini-review-round-up.
> Counterbalance's
end-of-the-year list.
> Tod
Goldberg's 13 Favorite Books of 2007.
> Jim
Ruland's end-of-the-year roundup.
> Mark
D'Anna's Best Reading of 2007.
> Chad
Simpson's Best Books of 2007.
> MKD's list
of 15 favorite books read in 2007.
All Owen Patterson wants is a normal life and a happy marriage.
But a year after the senseless murder of his brother-in-law,
his wife remains in mourning and his in-laws won't talk about
anything but their dead son. The murderer, Henry Joseph Raven,
is in prison, but to Owen, that isn't punishment enough. Owen
embarks on a quest to "balance the scales of justice,"
writing letters to Henry Raven under the pseudonym Lily Hazelton.
His plan: seduce the murderer, then break his heart.
As Owen pursues his self-appointed mission, Lily Hazelton develops
into a curious amalgam of details from his imagination,
snatches of his difficult childhood, and memories of his cousin
Eileen, a suicide who was his first true love. Bringing together
an epistolary game of cat-and-mouse and the harrowing record
of one man's psychological collapse, The Interloper is a compelling
and
original debut from a bold new writer.
As assured and sumptuously written as any first novel I've
encountered--
Antoine Wilson's prose sings and the story he tells here is
both clever and compelling.
This is writing at its very best.
T.C. Boyle
Antoine Wilsonís novel snuck up on me: deceptively normal prose, a tightening plot,Daniel Handler, author of Adverbs
The Interloper is tautly written, suspenseful, and abidingly strange, a first novel that defies expectationsSarah Shun-lien Bynum, author of Madeleine Is Sleeping
His novel might be named for altogether different reasons, yet it's author Wilson who has proven to be the true interloper.Tiffany Lee-Youngren, San Diego Union-Tribune
[A] pleasantly creepy debut novel... the pathos, delusion and hope festering within Owen will carry readers through.Publishers Weekly
The pleasures of this wry debut novel lie not in wondering if things will turn out badly for OwenBooklist
Wilsonís vivid first-person portrayal of Owenís slow crescendo into obsessionódespite its effect on the world he wants to restoreóNelly Heitman, ForeWord Magazine
OH, what thrilling dread, falling in with a character as twisted as the narrator of Antoine Wilson's terrific first novel, "The Interloper."Jess Walter, LA Times Sunday Book Review