Stanley Crawford (1937-2024) wrote and farmed with his late wife Rosemary in Northern New Mexico from 1969 until his passing. He was the author of five novels and three works of nonfiction and was the recipient of two NEA writing fellowships and a three-year Lila Wallace Reader's Digest Writing Award. In his later years, he taught at Colorado College and with the UMass Amherst MFA Writing Program. Ben Marcus was born in Chicago in 1967. The son of a mathematician and a literary scholar, he was raised in the Midwest, Austin, London, Aarhus, and New York. He holds degrees from New York University and Brown University, and has taught at schools in Texas, Virginia, New York, and Rhode Island. In addition to The Age of Wire and String, he is also the author of Notable American Women, Leaving the Sea, New American Stories, andNotes from the Fog.
"""Like that second the in its title, Log of the S.S. The Mrs. Unguentine is a stubborn creation that demands attention, and that odd surname is right on the money: This formally seamless book stings and soothes, like the most potent ointment, applied to literature too content to play it far too safe."" --Bookforum ""While Crawford's novel brings to mind the great literature of the sea (Moby-Dick, Mutiny on the Bounty, ""The Rime of the Ancient Mariner""), he doesn't allude to it; he doesn't have to. Log of the S.S. the Mrs. Unguentine--the book's most inelegant passage is its title--is a brave and audacious novel whose style, structure, story and language come together like strands of hemp spliced into an intricate knot."" --Chicago Tribune ""No one captures the mind of a control freak like Stanley Crawford."" --The Village Voice"