Ian Mackenzie was born and raised in Massachusetts, graduated from Harvard, and since then has lived in New York City, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and Sao Paulo, Brazil. He currently lives in Washington, DC.
"Feast Days is so much more than a novel. It's an all-consuming
meditation on the modern condition, the search for rootedness in
the ever-shifting worlds of our own creation, told by a writer so
gifted with language that you forget who you are in the poetry of
his prose."--Uzodinma Iweala, author of Beasts of No Nation
"Feast Days is a wry, arresting, clear-eyed, unsentimental, utterly
fresh take on the most urgent narrative questions there are. Class,
money, politics, race, globalization, marriage, gender,
reproduction, culture: Ian MacKenzie engages it all with such keen
intelligence and wit your eyes feel new. Magnificent, deep,
profound, and true."
--Elisa Albert, author of After Birth
"Brilliant.... A pervasive sent of unrest, both large and small
scale, social and personal, [is] conveyed in MacKenzie's unruffled,
discerning prose. With it, MacKenzie has captured one of the most
memorable narrative voices in recent fiction."
--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Ian MacKenzie writes about cities with the same verve and vigour
as Salman Rushdie and Zadie Smith.... MacKenzie has found a
narrator who can voice many of the uncomfortable issues of our
time: one cannot help but read on.... He is exploring the privilege
of the white American abroad, and Feast Days delivers cutting
criticism.... This book rings devastatingly true.... There is also
a delight in words that is wonderful to read, a delicious speed to
the prose. Feast Days is not a thriller, but reads a little like
one, moving swiftly from one kind of experience to the next with
brutal, dazzling effect."--The Guardian
"Intelligent and atmospheric, Feast Days deftly limns the inner
life of a foreigner whose own trajectory becomes increasingly bound
up with the tensions and complexities of the society in which she
has landed."--Chloe Aridjis, author of Book of Clouds and
Asunder
"MacKenzie's economy is remarkable. He deftly captures how an
outsider is only able to comprehend a country in pieces, assembling
an incomplete puzzle over time. What holds this portrait of a
marriage together, across time and across continents, is Emma's
voice...MacKenzie's slender novel feels heavier than many novels
twice its weight, dramatizing what it's like for the wealthy to
live with the poor in the corner of their eye... In that sense,
Feast Days is as much about America as it is about Brazil, as much
about San Francisco as São Paulo."--San Francisco Chronicle
"MacKenzie's first person account of a woman in her late 20s living
in São Paulo is one of the most convincing female voices this
reviewer has come across....Despite a lack of action - most of the
book centers on Emma's interior observations - there is a tension
that anything could happen, that snap decisions have life-altering
repercussions.... Feast Days is a sophisticated and astute story of
expatriate life told from a truly convincing, captivating female
voice."
--Irish Times
"Poignant and perceptive.... A satisfyingly complex look at life
abroad."
--Booklist
"The novel of the ugly American living abroad has bloomed into a
genre all its own, one I happen to devour with relish. Among my
favorites are Charles Portis's Gringos, Ben Lerner's Leaving the
Atocha Station and Nell Zink's The Wallcreeper. MacKenzie's second
novel arrives as a worthy addition to that list...Expatriate novels
often reveal more about their characters' homelands than they do
about their presumably exotic destinations. Feast Days does
likewise."--New York Times Book Review
"There is a sly, brooding intelligence at work in this novel,
recalling for me the startling, highest times in American
literature. MacKenzie is not just a great writer in the
making--he's already there."
--Brad Watson, author of Miss Jane
"This brilliant novel has no time for platitudes or conventional,
ankle-deep morality; it plunges us straight to the depths. I'm not
sure I know another book that feels at once so disaffected and so
full of longing, so expansive in its sympathy and so terrifying in
its candor. Devastating, funny and wise, it's among the best novels
I know about the fate of American innocence abroad."--Garth
Greenwell, author of What Belongs To You
"This highly anticipated new offering from MacKenzie poignantly
contrasts the political breakdown of Brazil with the marital
breakdown of a pair of expatriates."--Entertainment Weekly
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