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The Interloper

A Novel

Antoine Wilson

$39.99

Paperback

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English
Other Press LLC
17 May 2007
The debut from the author of Mouth to Mouth, a novel about obsession that makes for obsessive reading.

All Owen Patterson wants

is an normal life, a happy marriage, and a stable family. But following the brutal

and random murder of his brother-in-law, that dream is shattered. A year later, his

wife is still in mourning and his in-laws won't talk about anything but their dead

son.

The murderer, Henry Joseph Raven, has been put in prison, but as far as Owen

is concerned, prison isn't punishment enough. He embarks on a quest to ""balance the

scales of justice,"" writing letters to Henry Raven under the pseudonym Lily Hazelton.

His plan- to seduce the murderer, make him fall in love with his fictional correspondent,

and then break his heart. From one letter to the next, Lily Hazelton develops into

a curious amalgam of details from Owen's imagination, snatches of his difficult childhood,

and memories of his cousin Eileen, a suicide who was his first true love. Not entirely

in control of his own creation, Owen dives headfirst into the correspondence, only

to find himself caught in the trap he's set for Henry Raven.

Bringing together an

epistolary game of cat and mouse with the harrowing record of one man's psychological

collapse, The Interloper is a compelling and original debut from a bold new writer.

""As assured and sumptuously written as any first novel I've encountered-Antoine

Wilson's prose sings, and the story he tells here is both clever and compelling.

This is writing at its very best."" - T. Coraghessan Boyle
By:  
Imprint:   Other Press LLC
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 140mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   336g
ISBN:   9781590512630
ISBN 10:   1590512634
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Antoine Wilson Antoine Wilson's work has appeared in The Paris Review, Best New American Voices, StoryQuarterly, and other periodicals. He is a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop and recipient of the Carol Houck Smith Fellowship at the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing. He is a contributing editor of A Public Space. This is his first novel. He lives in Los Angeles.

Reviews for The Interloper: A Novel

One man's quest to avenge a relative's murder becomes an obsession in this lame debut novel.Narrator Owen Patterson, a software-manual writer in Los Angeles, meets Patricia Stocking on the Lake Tahoe ski slopes; after a whirlwind romance, they marry. But their honeymoon is interrupted by a tragedy. Patty's younger brother Calvin Junior (CJ) has been murdered. Her parents (aggressively masculine Calvin Senior, daffy Minerva) are devastated; Patty wears black year-round and spends her time watching old videos of CJ. The killer, Henry Joseph Raven, though not admitting guilt, gets a sentence of 20 years. Owen decides to ease his wife's misery by punishing Raven himself. He plans to entrap Raven emotionally through letters supposedly written by a lonely, available female; once Raven is hooked, the woman will end the relationship, Raven will be crushed and Patty will find closure; until then, Owen will keep his mission secret. It's as far-fetched as it sounds. For starters, Owen is a wimp, incapable of a bold ruse; it's Patty who calls the shots. Secondly, he has reason to believe Raven already has a woman of his own. Nonetheless, he goes ahead, inventing a woman, Lily, who with the help of computer-generated photos arouses Raven's interest. He even dons Patty's panties to feel like a woman, but a would-be humorous scene, when he's caught wearing the panties in a restroom, falls flat. Their correspondence and its ramifications take up much of the novel. We also learn more about the crime (a botched carjacking) and CJ (a bratty college kid, quite unsympathetic). As Patty heals, discarding black and boxing the videos, Owen deteriorates, getting a guilty thrill out of writing to a killer, and even identifying with Raven in a sexual fantasy he has created. When Patty discovers the letters, she leaves, and Owen becomes further isolated from reality. The novel ends with a series of improbable surprises that land Owen in the slammer.Both creepy and dull. (Kirkus Reviews)


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