David James Poissant’s stories have appeared in The Atlantic, Playboy, One Story, The Southern Review, Glimmer Train, and in the New Stories from the South and Best New American Voices anthologies. His writing has been awarded the Matt Clark Prize, the RopeWalk Fiction Chapbook Prize, the George Garrett Fiction Award, and the Alice White Reeves Memorial Award from the National Society of Arts & Letters, as well as awards from the Chicago Tribune, The Atlantic, and Playboy. He teaches in the MFA program at the University of Central Florida and lives in Orlando with his wife and daughters.
"[A] wise debut collection... Poissant's characters are often a
mess-belligerent, impulsive, smart in all the wrong ways-but he
manages their lives with precision, intelligence, and clarity...
Beautiful [stories], with a rogue touch."
*New York Times Book Review*
"A penetrating look at American manhood in the new century."
*Atlanta Journal Constitution*
“The Heaven of Animals targets the tough and tender dynamics that
make and break families.”
*Elle*
"Poissant’s work has been compared to Anton Chekhov, Raymond Carver
and George Saunders, so it goes without saying that his debut
short-stories collection is something special."
*New York Post*
“Early reviews have compared Poissant’s stories, which ply the
literary territory between realism and allegory, to the work of
Anton Chekhov and Raymond Carver.”
*The Millions*
"The Heaven of Animals might remind readers of two stylistically
disparate story collections — Richard Ford’s A Multitude of Sins
and Amy Hempel’s The Dog of the Marriage — which are surely not bad
company to keep."
*Los Angeles Review of Books*
"The Heaven of Animals avoids bleakness, no matter how sad its
stories may be, and this is a real achievement...[Poissant's]
overall project—trying to wring hope from despair—shows great
compassion….This is Poissant’s first book, and if Brock Clarke
predicts (in blurb form) that Poissant will become `his
generation’s Richard Ford,’ who am I to argue?”
*Electric Literature*
"An engaging, well-crafted collection... The author’s deep caring
for his characters surfaces in his compassionate attempts to unpack
the perplexities of the human condition. Poissant’s thoroughly
realist style and tight storytelling will appeal to fans of Raymond
Carver, Richard Ford, and George Saunders."
*Booklist*
“[Poissant] presents layered storylines and realistically flawed
characters in his first collection of short stories.… Through his
artful storytelling, [Poissant] gives us a glimpse into the
loneliness, the brokenness, and ultimately, the importance, of our
emotional connections with others.”
*Highbrow Magazine*
“[A] collection of vicious and heartbreaking vignettes.”
*The Orlando Sentinel*
"Masterful…Poissant’s gift of fiction writing [is] a great big
gift. So big that it stretches the short story form a bit; he turns
typical short story writing pitfalls into strengths…You can move
among William Faulkner, Harry Crews, and Flannery O’Connor to find
the muscle that is in [“Lizard Man”] (and many of the others here),
and among Eudora Welty, Lee Smith, and Jill McCorkle for the
tenderness….A great strength of this collection: Though many of the
characters are not like us readers one bit (some are) Poissant
shows us how much alike we all are—as fathers, mothers, friends,
children, liars, and lovers—no matter our pedigree….Poissant can do
the seemingly impossible…I hear a novel is on the way. Look
out."
*Garden & Gun*
“Poissant demonstrates that mankind, especially American males, may
not be so separate from the animal kingdom after all.… His finest
stories focus on the nuts and bolts of narrative. Despite the
preponderance of scales, tails, fangs and feathers that occupy The
Heaven of Animals, its real subject is all too human.”
*Atlanta-Journal Constitution*
“Unlikeable characters demand attention and hold it wildly from
page to page, bringing unexpected beauty to a world that is often
wicked. . . . [The Heaven of Animals] is great fun to read. . . .
There are no clear happy endings in The Heaven of Animals, but
there is a feeling of satisfaction regardless of a story’s outcome.
By book’s end you know you’ve spent your time valuably, and in the
hands of a deft and skillful writer.”
*The Rumpus*
"Told in honest and inventive prose, The Heaven of Animals is not
afraid of the beautiful but painful complications of the
heart."
*Interview Magazine*
"As its title suggests, The Heaven of Animals contains a menagerie
of creatures—from bees to bison to wolves to iguanas. Yet, the
human characters within David James Poissant’s debut story
collection are often wilder and more disorderly than the animals
they encounter.... These characters become overwhelmed with
emotion, make unpredictable decisions, and let their instincts
guide them. They are dangerous to others and, perhaps more often,
to themselves. Of course, that is what makes them so remarkably
human."
*The Rumpus*
"The Heaven of Animals is full of stories that linger long after
you have closed the book and turned off the light."
*One Story*
“We care about and sympathize with Poissant’s characters, even the
most conflicted and difficult ones. The pieces vary greatly in
length, style, and subject matter. . . . Poissant is an excellent
writer. . . the brief and beautiful moments of human connection
shine through in every story.”
*Library Journal (Starred Review)*
"The much-anthologized Poissant justifies his status as a favorite
of the literary quarterlies with this debut collection of unsparing
yet warmly empathetic stories.... Rueful and kind, akin to both
Anton Chekhov and Raymond Carver in humane spirit and technical
mastery"
*Kirkus (Starred Review)*
“The Heaven of Animals is an extraordinary debut from Florida
author David James Poissant--a Venn diagram of the miraculous and
the absurd. Like Flannery O'Connor, Poissant's stories are marked
by violence, humor, and grace; like Saunders, Poissant can
spoon-bend reality; like Carver and Diaz, he writes scenes soaked
in kerosene and seconds from combustion. In these pages you'll find
charming reprobates and self-deluded hustlers, young lovers,
alligators and dead dogs, fathers and sons, all the warped love of
family, the batshit hilarity of the South, and the 'geometry" of
loss.'"
*Pulitzer Prize-finalist author of Swamplandia*
"Wow. David James Poissant has written a fantastic, beguiling book.
Often offbeat and always enthralling, The Heaven of Animals seduces
the reader, again and again, with our weird, urgent attempts to
understand each other. These stories lure the loners and romantics
out of America’s backwaters, then march them into the moonlight to
break your heart."
*author of Battleborn*
“Wild as two men wrestling an alligator, tender as a father
stretching out on the floor next to his sleeping son, the stories
in The Heaven of Animals will make you stop and wonder. David James
Poissant digs deep until he reaches the heart of each tale,
unearthing unexpected connections with his vivid and graceful
prose. These men and women, parents and children, all stand at the
precipice of loss, and in their final moments, reach out for each
other.”
*author of The Good Thief*
"It's not often you read stories with this much range, precision,
power, and emotional depth in a first collection. It's not like a
"first collection" at all, in fact. This is beautiful, exciting,
accomplished work. David James Poissant is one of the
best-of-the-best new writers out there, and I have no doubt there's
a lot more to come."
*award-winning author of The Heaven of Mercury and Aliens in the
Prime of Their Lives*
"A character in “Lizard Man” has tattoos that, if you look closely,
secretly hold another image in the design. David James Poissant’s
writing has that same effect, the initial and wonderful strangeness
giving way, slowly but surely, to something deeper, something
difficult, something beautiful. Poissant is a writer who knows us
with such clarity that we wonder how he found his way so easily
into our hearts and souls."
*New York Times bestselling author of The Family Fang and Tunneling
to the Center of the Earth*
"David James Poissant is one of our finest young writers, with a
taut and subtle prose style, a deep knowledge of craft, and a heart
so vast it encompasses whole worlds. I read his fiction and became
a lifelong fan; I promise that you will too."
*author of Arcadia, The Monsters of Templeton, and Delicate Edible
Birds*
"There is much to admire in David James Poissant's excellent debut
story collection. His men and women are never mere caricatures.They
are flawed but fully human and their stories are compelling and
true to life's complexities. There is a refreshing lack of glibness
in his work; he is a serious writer and these are serious
stories."
*New York Times bestselling author of Serena and Nothing Gold Can
Stay*
"'What thehell do you do with twelve feet of living, breathing
alligator?' Such is thedilemma for the narrator of David James
Poissant’s 'Lizard Man.' Beneath thatquestion lies the age-old
problem of fathers and sons and the wrong turns andmissteps that
turn love monstrous. Poissant is a first-ratestoryteller who has an
appreciation for the absurd turns of events that pressdown into all
we try to keep buried until we have no choice but to face thepeople
we are when we’re alone in the dark."
*Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of Break the Skin and The
Bright Forever*
"David James Poissant’s “Lizard Man” delivers all you could want
from a story: searing tensions, the irresistible strangeness of the
Floridian landscape, incandescent prose, and characters alight with
wisdom and pain, with hope and violence and regret. Throw in an
alligator in a kiddie pool and, dear reader, you’ve got one hell of
a story. Poissant is an extraordinary talent, and Lizard Man is
nothing short of unforgettable."
*author of What the World Will Look Like When all the Water Leaves
Us*
“'Lizard Man,' a richly atmospheric story set in the swampland of
Florida, explores the legacy of one father’s mistakes, and the
improbable beauty of his attempts to make things right."
*author of Black & White and Family History*
"David James Poissant will end up being his generation's Richard
Ford: his fiction is full of big ideas, of startling insights into
how we live now; and his writing is so smart, so sensitive and
self-deprecating and full of empathy. He is one of our very best
young writers. I know, know that we will be talking about him for
years and years to come."
*author of Exley, An Arsonist's Guide to Writers' Homes in New
England, and The Ordinary White Boy*
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