Skip to product information
1 of 1

Oyster by Biguenet, John.

Oyster by Biguenet, John.

Condition
Regular price £1.50
Regular price £6.99 Sale price £1.50
Sale Sold out
Taxes included.

Low stock: 3 left

Oyster

Author(s): Biguenet, John.
Pub: Orion
Pack Qty: 0 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780752842271 - New

199mm x 128mm x 22mm

Publication: 2003

Pages: 288

Product Description
With comparisons to Flaubert, Chekhov, and Faulkner, O. Henry Award-winner John Biguenet earned wide acclaim for his debut short-story collection, The Torturers Apprentice. In his astonishing first novel, Oyster, he demonstrates the same mastery of craft and rigor of vision that led critics across the country to join Robert Olen Butler in praising this important new writer.
Set on the Louisiana coast in 1957, Oyster recounts the engrossing tale of a deadly rivalry between two families. To avoid ruin after years of declining oyster crops, Felix and Mathilde Petitjean offer their young daughter, Therese, in marriage to 52-year-old Horse Bruneau, who holds the papers on their boat and house. Bruneau has spent his life as Felixs rival for both the Petitjeans century-old oyster beds and, as we learn, Mathilde. But as Therese explains to Horse one night as they float in a pirogue alone in the marsh, I dont get bought for the price of no damn boat.
The spiraling violence of Oyster and the seething passions behind it drive an unpredictable tale of murder and revenge in which two women and the men who desire them play out a drama as elemental and inexorable as a Greek tragedy.
Review
GǣA rich gumbo of incest and longing that simmers with tension.Gǥ (Playboy)

GǣGripping.... An unforgettable look at the effects of generations of bad blood between two families.Gǥ (Booklist (starred review))

GǣA masterful tale of deadly rivalries.Gǥ (New Orleans Times-Picayune)

GǣBiguenetGÇÖs calm, lucid prose is consistently entrancing.Gǥ (New York Times Book Review)

GǣBiguenet explores with startling honesty the virtues and flaws that reveal themselves when we encounter extraordinary situations.Gǥ (Yale Review of Books)

GǣAn astonishing, occasionally daunting imagination.Gǥ (Minneapolis Star-Tribune)

GǣAn outstanding first novel. . . full of mollusks, menace, and murder.Gǥ (Esquire)

GǣA thrilling read filled with a complex and unpredictable plot.Gǥ (Daily Mississippian)

Gǣ[Oyster] unfolds like a Rube Goldberg blueprint, GǪ whose complicated network GǪ entwines the lives of two families.Gǥ (San Francisco Chronicle)

GǣTruths. . . as universal as any Euripides might have contemplated.Gǥ (Washington Post)

GǣSuspenseful and intriguing, with a sultry atmosphere and seething passions.Gǥ (USA Today)

GǣThis remarkable first novel by Biguenet . . . [is] captivating from start to finish.Gǥ (Library Journal)

GǣBiguenetGǪcatches the scents and sounds of the bayou, and his characters bristle with a dark intensity.Gǥ (New York Times)
From Publishers Weekly
Much feted for his debut collection of stories, The Torturers Apprentice, Biguenet follows up with a steamy first novel set on the Louisiana coast. The Petitjeans and the Bruneaus are rival oyster fishing families in Plaquemines Parish in 1957, struggling to survive in an environment rapidly falling prey to petroleum companies and their ravaging of swamp and bayou ecosystems. As it gets more difficult to hang on economically, old families begin to slip. The Petitjean family, headed by Felix, has reluctantly turned to Horse Bruneau for a loan. Desperate for cash, Felix and his wife, Mathilde, approve Horses plan to marry their daughter, Therese. Therese scotches that plan by luring Horse to the Petitjean property for a supposed midnight tryst, then murdering him. When Horses body turns up in a trawlers net, his sons Darryl (Little Horse) and Ross (with their gentler brother, Rusty, looking on in horror) murder Thereses brother, Alton, who they blame for Horses murder since nobody even considers that a slip of a girl like Therese could kill the powerful Horse. Darryl has always hated Alton, anyway, suspecting (rightly, as it turns out) that Alton is his half brother the fruit of an a

View full details