Lives of Mapmakers

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Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2006 - Fiction - 194 pages
Alicia L. Conroy's stories stretch the boundaries of form and language to demarcate an imaginary territory of her own devising. The characters in Lives of Mapmakers--whether a contemporary farm worker or a sixteenth-century cartographer--seek direction in their lives. Their journeys are ethereal and magical: the discovery of a prairie mermaid exposes the best and worst in people, teenagers puzzle over their bodies' changing geographies and, in the title story, a mapmaker's quest to perfect his worldview becomes part of a narrative fabric that spans centuries. Conroy experiments with the contour of language, working in nontraditional narrative forms. She etches crosshatched landscapes in which her protagonists must make decisions whose consequences are beyond their immediate comprehension. Her inventive and off-center use of metaphor and myth ultimately open our eyes to the beauty and struggle occurring in the quotidian world around us.

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Contents

MudColored Beauties of the Plains
11
The One Thing Im Good
37
Bad Hand
43
Copyright

8 other sections not shown

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About the author (2006)

ALICIA L. CONROY lived in Denmark and Wales, and worked in Boston for 13 years before returning to her hometown of Minneapolis, Minn. She received a B.A. from Mount Holyoke College and a M.F.A. from Bowling Green State University. She publishes fiction, feature articles and reviews.

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