MAY 2007: AUSTRALIA; OCTOBER 2007: US/CANADA
HarperCollinsPublishers are proud to
announce the publication of award-winning author, Janette Turner
Hospital’s Orpheus
Lost.
Achingly sensual, effortlessly lyrical, Janette Turner Hospital’s
dazzling Orpheus Lost is a powerful and disturbing
novel.
It is a love story on a grand scale that spans
America, Australia and
the Middle East. It is also an exploration of the ghastly
side effects
of terrorism and of the nightmarish mistakes of war time from which
the
lovers must struggle to extricate themselves.
In the ancient myth, Orpheus travels to the underworld
to rescue his lover Eurydice from death. In this compelling re-imagining
of the Orpheus story, Leela travels into an underworld of kidnapping,
torture and despair in search of her lover. A mathematical genius,
Leela has escaped her hardscrabble Southern hometown to study in
Boston. There she encounters Mishka, a young Australian musician
who soon becomes her lover. Then one day Leela is picked up off
the street and taken to an interrogation centre. There has been
an ‘incident’, an explosion on the underground; terrorists
are suspected. Her interrogators reveal that Mishka may not be
all he seems. But as she struggles to digest all this, Mishka disappears…
"One
of the most powerful and innovative writers in English today.’
- Times Literary Supplement
‘I’ve always been intensely interested
in examining ordinary human beings, people without political agendas,
who are suddenly caught up in the fist of history and crisis. If
someone happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, what
happens to their lives from that point onwards? How do they negotiate
life, history, politics thereafter?
‘I suppose I can trace the birth of this
intense interest to something that happened to me when we were
living in a village in South India in 1977. I was with my two young
children in an exceedlingly ramshackle taxi heading from the village
to the city market in Trivandrum. It was a time of political upheaval
in India. Riots broke out, and suddenly our taxi was surrounded
by a mob waving the banners of the Communist Party of South India.
The taxi could not move forward. Our taxi driver was very frightened
and was trembling violently. The rioters were drumming on the taxi
roof and windows. The children and I were in the back seat and
I felt that weird and absolute calm which is actually shock. I
had an arm around each child and can still vividly remember the
two dominant thoughts in my head: 1) I must make the children feel
safe with me and 2) No one will ever know what happened to us.
In fact, the tense situation only lasted a few minutes and then
the crowd let the taxi move slowly forward. Since then, I’ve
been aware of how suddenly and how randomly political events of
which one is only dimly aware can disrupt a life.’
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