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The World Is on Fire

Scrap, Treasure, and Songs of Apocalypse

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Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
This "magnificently compelling" essay collection explores obsession, anxiety, and Existential dread from the Book of Revelation to the Liberace Museum (Minneapolis Star Tribune).
The sermons of Joni Tevis' youth filled her with dread, a sense "that an even worse story—one you hadn't read yet—could likewise come true." In this revelatory collection, she reckons with her childhood fears by exploring the uniquely American fascination with apocalypse. From a haunted widow's wildly expanding mansion, to atomic test sites in the Nevada desert, her settings are often places of destruction and loss.
And yet Tevis transforms these eerie destinations into sites of creation as well, uncovering powerful points of connection. Whether she's relating her experience of motherhood or describing the timbre of Freddy Mercury's voice in "Somebody to Love," she relies on the same reverence for detail and sense of awe. And by anchoring her attention to the raw materials of our world—nails and beams, dirt and stone, bones and blood—she discovers grandeur in the seemingly mundane.
Winner of the 2016 Firecracker Award for Creative Nonfiction
Finalist for the 2016 Pat Conroy Southern Book Prize
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 30, 2015
      The author of The Wet Collection returns with a second collection of essays, this time with an apocalyptic bent. The book’s 21 selections—an odd commingling of dark tourism travelogues, voyeuristic impulses, and elegaic musings on the past, present, and future—take Tevis’s readers on a visceral journey from decaying railroad towns in North Dakota, where “the line between living and ghost wasn’t always obvious,” to the “Doom Town” at the Nevada atomic test site, a row of houses inhabited by mannequins “with eyes like apple seeds.” Tevis’s writing is utterly beautiful and authentically her own, driven by a deep-seated need to share the images that haunt her. Individual essays feel like the literary equivalent of long exhalations after holding one’s breath, a passionate outpouring of description and revelation (“This is no ordinary sea, no ordinary sunset, and despite its calm surface, the water reminds me somehow of solvent... This is water with an opinion”). Tevis does not provide the literary equivalent of any “duck and cover” directives for readers—her prose demands we must meet her in her burning world—but once we get there, the rewards are rich.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2015
      Evocative essays on faith, life and wonder.In these lyrical, finely crafted pieces, Tevis (English and Creative Writing/Furman Univ.; The Wet Collection: A Field Guide to Iridescence and Memory, 2012) reflects on haunted places: a house with 160 rooms stalked by its owner's ghost; a nuclear bomb testing ground in Nevada; the site of Buddy Holly's plane crash; auction rooms filled with abandoned furniture; and, not least, her own memories. Apocalypse, she writes, means "unveiling," and she searches for wisdom in devastation and despair. In the 1950s, the Nevada Test Site was a popular vacation destination where families gathered for the thrill of seeing a nuclear bomb explode, incinerating Doom Town: model houses staged with mannequins. From 1952 until 1992, 1,021 bombs exploded, the first hundred aboveground, contaminating the land forever. Tourists in Las Vegas could take a bus to the site; or they might have visited the Liberace Museum, where mannequins wore the performer's gaudy costumes, "dusted with silver, crusted with cabochons," as gorgeous and surreal as the bomb. Death haunts the Salton Sea, a vast inland body of water created by a mistake in irrigation in California's Imperial Valley. Now it is polluted, "stark and sad....Scalded, scabbed." Fish are gone, except for tilapia; birds, too. One year, park rangers cremated massive numbers of dead pelicans. The sea, Tevis writes, is "a practice apocalypse, terrible but local: if you're lucky, you can leave it behind." Like poets Gerard Manley Hopkins and Mary Oliver, Tevis sees the natural world imbued with spiritual power. "I don't want to be the same after this trip," she tells herself in the stark, forbidding landscape of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. And she was not, discovering she was pregnant. During labor, "spells fill the space" and "a strange glow marks this seam between life and death." That seam glows fiercely, startlingly bright, in these rich, revelatory essays.

    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2015

      Tevis (literature & creative writing, Furman Univ.; The Wet Collection) grew up in South Carolina in a world of religious fire and brimstone and watching Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous. This contrast of the apocalypse and glitz is what she delivers in these essays. In "Damn Cold in February: Buddy Holly, View-Master, and the A-Bomb," Tevis illustrates this point with her description of the atomic summer of 1957, when Holly was a rock-and-roll rising star, yet families were learning about bomb shelters and emergency food supplies. Similarly, Tevis compares her childhood fascination with Liberace with her admiration for the church pianist. The author has a keen eye, details from which flow through her pen into her writing. In "The Scissorman" she follows a South Carolina man who has converted his van into a workshop and travels to salons to sharpen hairstylists' scissors. In "Hammer Price (Song of the Auctioneer)" she explains her love of auctions and the ring of old room keys she purchased at a hotel sale. VERDICT Tevis's essays provide a travelog of her life. Her insights take readers from the steel of scissor blades and the cold waters of Alaska to the fire of atomic bomb testing grounds as seen through a View-Master.--Joyce Sparrow, Kenneth City, FL

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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