Description
About the Author
Tom Piazza's twelve books include the novels A Free State and City of Refuge, the story collection Blues and Trouble, and his nonfiction work Why New Orleans Matters. He was a principal writer for the HBO series Treme, and lives in New Orleans.
Reviews
"The mother of all writers' conferences. Piazza doesn't force anything, and he doesn't miss a trick."-Roy Blount Jr.
"The Auburn Conference is a brilliant imagining of an 1883 writers' conference with Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, Frederick Douglass, Mark Twain, and other luminaries as characters. This august round table in Upstate New York grapples with the fate of American democracy and what constitutes literature. The dialogue imagined by Piazza-especially his treatment of Harriet Beecher Stowe-is dazzling. Piazza conjures a distant era that eerily translates to our own broken and troubled times. This is an epic novel by one of America's greatest writers."-Douglas Brinkley
"Who wouldn't want to go to this conference?"-Greil Marcus
"An unexpected combination of wit, passion, and intellect that lands with tremendous relevance."-;Mary Gaitskill
"Tom Piazza has gathered the nation's most renowned writers in response to a provocative question: 'What is an American?' These four words posed by a character in the aftermath of the Civil War, resound today with such perfect timing. Through this tantalizing dialogue, the past interrogates the present and future, and we cannot play innocent or uninformed. To read The Auburn Conference is to be there, listening, raising one's hand, nodding one's head, or even rising to one's feet in protest or applause."-Yusef Komunyakaa
"What do Frederick Douglass and Mark Twain discuss over brandy and cigars? What gets Emily Dickinson out of the house? The Auburn Conference is an ebullient work of loving homage, pitch-perfect ventriloquism, and drawing-room farce that unfolds into an examination of grand American questions: What, finally, is America? And does it deserve to be saved?"-Nathaniel Rich
"The Auburn Conference is a display of intellectual pyrotechnics, a fictional nineteenth-century writers' conference in which modern and historical observations abound on literature, celebrity, and ego, culminating in a grand debate over slavery, women's suffrage, and the American ideal. Both witty and intellectually acute, this is a powerful novel."-Roxana Robinson
"An 1883 writers' conference raises questions still roiling 21st-century America. . . . [an] intriguing mix of humor and underlying seriousness. . . .Readable and entertaining."-Kirkus
Book Information
ISBN 9781609388812
Author Tom Piazza
Format Paperback
Page Count 199
Imprint University of Iowa Press
Publisher University of Iowa Press