Stephane Michaka was born in Paris in 1974. He studied at Cambridge University and taught French in South Africa before embarking on a writing career. He has written theater pieces, children's books, television scripts, and radio plays. Scissors is his third novel.
[An] empathetic exploration of an author's soul. --NPR Wonderful. . . . Scissors is extraordinary . . . for the humanity and compassion with which Michaka presents his flawed and fascinating characters. . . . Tender without ever slipping into sentimentality. -- The Millions Inventive. . . . [Michaka] succeeds at evoking Carver's own oft-imitated style. -- The Santa Fe New Mexican A pretty darn good novel. -- The Oregonian Michaka performs the prodigious feat of intertwining four biographies to produce a powerful reflection on literature itself. --Le Monde Praise for Scissors [An] empathetic exploration of an author's soul, his allegiance to his writing above all else, and the increasingly painful submission to his editor that eventually leads to a breaking point ... Like the best literary homages, Scissors evokes a craving for the original -- and, in this case, further consideration of the aesthetic questions at the heart of Carver's published work. --NPR [ Scissors ] takes readers deep into the creative life. Funny, sad, and deeply compassionate, Scissors is a unique and engaging novel that ponders life, love, and the importance of believing in ourselves and in our chosen work. -- Booklist Whether or not you know anything about Carver and his stories matters little. Stephane Michaka's talent and the attention he brings to each of his characters suffice to rivet the reader to his words. He breathes life into the trio as they revolve around the central figure of the writer, the man without certainties, whose work, although butchered by his editor, has been passed down to posterity. --Le Figaro Stephane Michaka performs the prodigious feat of intertwining four biographies to produce a powerful reflection on literature itself. --Le Monde This book is a novel about writing. Stephane Michaka excels in inventing stories that Carver himself could have penned. But this book is also a love story, full of power and inebriation. But also painful, like a hangover, and abiding long after the definitive separation. Scissors is at once fascinating and beautiful, engrossing and brilliantly structured ... Reading this novel will immerse you in a haunting, lived narrative experience. As Raymond Carver's work does. --L'Avenir Ambitious and deftly woven, Stephane Michaka's novel is fascinating whether or not you know about Raymond Carver and his editor Gordon Lish. As a stylist whose main concerns are emotions and human frailty, Michaka successfully depicts a writer in hi Praise for Scissors Whether or not you know anything about Carver and his stories matters little. Stephane Michaka's talent and the attention he brings to each of his characters suffice to rivet the reader to his words. He breathes life into the trio as they revolve around the central figure of the writer, the man without certainties, whose work, although butchered by his editor, has been passed down to posterity. --Le Figaro Stephane Michaka performs the prodigious feat of intertwining four biographies to produce a powerful reflection on literature itself. --Le Monde This book is a novel about writing. Stephane Michaka excels in inventing stories that Carver himself could have penned. But this book is also a love story, full of power and inebriation. But also painful, like a hangover, and abiding long after the definitive separation. Scissors is at once fascinating and beautiful, engrossing and brilliantly structured ... Reading this novel will immerse you in a haunting, lived narrative experience. As Raymond Carver's work does. --L'Avenir Ambitious and deftly woven, Stephane Michaka's novel is fascinating whether or not you know about Raymond Carver and his editor Gordon Lish. As a stylist whose main concerns are emotions and human frailty, Michaka successfully depicts a writer in his everyday existence. Someone who struggles incessantly with words and with his own doubts. Someone whose texts, imbued with a rare empathy, evoke the shocks and jolts of life and make the real both poignant and poetic. --Le Journal du Dimanche The book's debts to its famous subjects are repaid. It is a measure of the book's success that readers need no knowledge of its famous subjects to appreciate it. Daring and impressive. -- Kirkus Reviews