description
father's disappearance years before, a mercurial young woman comes to believe that the barren city she inhabits is actually the underworld. Occupying the liminal spaces between reality, illusion, memory and mania, Olana recounts an allegorical journey from profound disorientation to absolute clarity. Often directly addressing the reader, she shares the discovery of her father's fate while also searching to find her way back to the land of the living, stating as she does that "Every escape from hell is an act of imagination." Told in 265 short, titled passages and gathered into four parts, Tidal Lock proceeds through the polyphonic juxtapolitions of its broken narrative and startling textures, allowing for dissonance that drives gradually yet ineluctably toward its revelatory climax. Employing many of the formal innovations used in Sea of Hooks, Lindsay Hill's eagerly awaited second novel offers the reader a uniquely challenging, provocative and rewarding narrative experience.--Publisher (11/5/2024 12:00:00 AM)