John Wray is the author of the critically acclaimed novels The Lost Time Accidents, Lowboy, The Right Hand of Sleep, and Canaan's Tongue. He was named one of Granta's Best of Young American Novelists in 2007. The recipient of a Whiting Writers' Award, he lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Named a Best Book of 2018 by The Wall Street Journal, SF Chronicle,
The Guardian, and Oprah.com "[Godsend] becomes much stranger and
more original after it arrives in Pakistan, discovering within
itself a profound understanding of the demands of religious
practice--of religious submission, especially--which has eluded
almost every serious contemporary American novelist since 9/11. It
is not only Wray's heroine but also his novel that comes of age,
steadily deepening and astounding as it develops . . . The novel
exhibits the reportorial authority you might expect, with a command
of detail, context, and pace reminiscent of a reality-brined
adventurer like Graham Greene or Robert Stone." --James Wood, The
New Yorker "John Wray's lean, bristling novel is filled with
startling transformations: The teenage girl at its center disguises
herself as a man and leaves the suburbs of California for the
Taliban army in Afghanistan. Yet the most unsettling change is the
way it shifts the reader's perspectives on Sept. 11 and the war on
terror." --The Wall Street Journal (Best Books of 2018) "A furious
narrative momentum carries the story to its devastating conclusion
. . . Rawly unsentimental but illuminated throughout by a subtle
compassion, Godsend is a novel of enormous emotional intelligence
which makes for compelling and consistently unpredictable reading."
--Robin Yassin-Kassab, The Guardian "None of the Anglophone
post-9/11 novels have been as ingeniously involved with the
question of conversion to Islam and with the determination to take
one's acquired belief into the realm of violence as John Wray's new
novel, Godsend . . . He does an outstanding job in depicting a
protagonist who has studied Islamic theology with a mix of avidity
and simplicity, has taken the lessons of Qur'anic verses to heart
without having matured enough to approach faith seriously . . . The
novel's highest achievement is to show how each one of her insights
is nothing but an illusion." --Amir Khadem, The Los Angeles Review
of Books "Brilliantly executed . . . Mr. Wray's novel is on one
hand an entirely familiar story of youthful rebellion and on the
other an unimaginable depiction of a cold-blooded killer groomed by
the world's most notorious army. Such tensions make Godsend
relentlessly gripping." --Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
"Mesmerizing . . . A significant literary performance . . . Godsend
builds to a shattering, balefully vivid ending. Aden survives to
walk through a minefield--or is it a graveyard?" --Dwight Garner,
The New York Times "[Godsend is] a book that has no right to work
at all, but Wray's storytelling is so taut, his prose so
laser-etched, his psychology so audacious, and his wisdom so much
the opposite of conventional, that it ends up working brilliantly."
--Jonathan Franzen, The Guardian (Best Books of 2018) "John Wray
conjures up an extraordinary character: Aden Sawyer, Californian
girl, pre-9/11 Muslim convert, cross-dressing imposter, Pakistani
madrassa student and, finally, Taliban militant in post-9/11
Afghanistan . . . With a novelist's perception, Wray sees through
jihadism's political garb . . . Wray's own prose is perfectly
pitched. He assumes an idiom seemingly native to Afghanistan . . .
[that] grounds Godsend in its surroundings as surely as describing
caves of pink granite." --Tanjil Rashid, Financial Times
"Wray's audacious fiction is clearly steeped in painstaking
research, offering a devastating portrayal of the Taliban while
finding a place of compassion for his profoundly misguided
protagonists . . . The feat Wray pulls off is to seek understanding
without ever becoming sentimental." --Dawn Raffel, Oprah (Best
Books to Give Your Friends) "Wray regulates the excitement levels,
from tense to explosive, with a sure hand for narrative momentum .
. . Wray's prose is hard, clipped and precise, a hammer to move
this grim story forward. Yet it can expand into something like
Hemingwayesque eloquence in describing the terrain that opens its
arms to Aden . . . [Godsend is] a work of great power, seamlessly
elucidating the seductions of faith and violence." --Dan Cryer, SF
Gate "[A] disturbing image of disaffected youth and the lures of
extremism." --Publishers Weekly "I've just spent every spare moment
in a fever heat reading Godsend, and I'm truly dazzled by its
daring literal and psychological border-crossings, its tonal
complexity, and its pitiless compassion. Nothing is foreign to John
Wray's imagination. I hope I can write half as fearlessly one day."
--Karen Russell, author of Vampires in the Lemon Grove and
Swamplandia! "John Wray is making a place for himself among our
greatest living writers. Godsend is a wonder to me: a fearless book
about a terrifying subject. The elegance and daring of this novel
left me dizzy." --Akhil Sharma, author of Family Life "This novel
crosses lines that fiction should, stretching the imagination from
suburban California to a jihadi training camp in the foothills of
the Hindu Kush. Wray's taut prose propels a gripping narrative that
stands head and shoulders above most fiction about America's war on
terror." --Hari Kunzru, author of White Tears "This is a great book
about a time and a place that I lived through. I was nostalgic,
reading Godsend, for the days when I was a young girl in
Afghanistan, going to the madrasa with my friends. This came as a
surprise to me. But there was beauty in that life. And there is
beauty in this story." --Shamila Kohestani, recipient of the Arthur
Ashe Courage Award
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