PEN/Hemingway Award winner
The Thin Tear in the Fabric of Space gathers stories about coping with grief, trying to love people who have died, and鈥攎ore broadly鈥攍eaving old versions of the self behind, sometimes by choice and sometimes out of necessity. In each of the nine stories, Douglas Trevor鈥檚 characters are forced to face uncomfortable realities. For Elena Gavrushnekov in the title story, that means admitting after the death of her beloved that she still longs for contact with other human bodies. For Peter in 鈥淐entral Square,鈥 it is realizing that, like his deceased father before him, he is drinking himself to death. Unable to confront his incapacitated mother and the memory of the plane crash that killed his father, Edwin Morris in 鈥淪aint Francis in Flint鈥 is compelled to acknowledge that his saintly aspirations are not what they appear to be, while Sharon Mackaney in 鈥淭he Surprising Weight of the Body's Organs鈥 struggles with uncontrollable outbursts of rage in the wake of her young son鈥檚 death.
In moments of great pain and loss, when self-expression seems impossible and terribly useless, the characters in these stories nonetheless discover the tenderness of others. In 鈥淭he River,鈥 the narrator finds that the friendship he has forged with a French girl with whom he can only just communicate has bred intense, almost intuitive compassion, while in 鈥淔ellowship of the Bereaved,鈥 the disconsolate brother of the deceased sister who occupies the empty center of the story uncovers not only anger in his parents but also empathy and humor. As these characters persevere in their own lives, they do so mindful of, and humanized by, the experiences of having seen people they know and love slip unexpectedly into the thin tear in the fabric of space: that quiet chasm that so resolutely separates the living from the dead.
鈥淚n 鈥楲abor Day Hurricane, 1935,鈥 Douglas Trevor vividly recreates a historical event. While that is the only story in The Thin Tear in the Fabric of Space set in the historical past, many of the other stories juxtapose fact鈥攂oth historical and scientific鈥攚ith narration to an engaging effect, one that distinguishes the voice of this new writer.鈥濃擲tuart Dybek
鈥淒ouglas Trevor writes movingly and persuasively about the ways in which people can be unmoored by loss. The bereaved parents and brokenhearted students in his stories turn to travel and to drink and most of all to books for solace: Thoreau鈥檚 Walden, Lowell鈥檚 poetry, and even Gray鈥檚 Anatomy. Each of the characters is a fully realized human being, a small civilization of memories and preoccupations, and the final paragraphs of Trevor鈥檚 stories are among the most knowing and beautiful you are ever likely to read.鈥濃擪evin Brockmeier
2006 PEN/Hemingway Finalist