Don't You Know I Love You
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Dzanc Books
Published:2nd Apr '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Special promotional push to LGBTQ literary groups and publications, including OutWrite DC and Lambda Literary Regional author tour, likely focused on New England and the East Coast (Maryland, New York, Massachusetts, Virginia, North Carolina) Review and coverage push to outlets where Laura has previously published and has personal connections, including The Week, DAME Magazine, The Atlantic, The Guardian, AV Club, Vulture, SPIN, Indiewire, Nylon, HuffPost, Los Angeles Review of Books, Salon, The Rumpus, and The Nervous Breakdown Ambitious galley push to likely publications, such a Jezebel, Them.us, The Advocate, Paste, Vox, Bitch, Bust, Bustle, Ms., Buzzfeed, Argo, Gay magazine, Slate, Guernica, Folio, Tin House Online, Lit Hub, Electric Lit, Poets & Writers, The Paris Review, Hip Mama, CALYX Journal, and Flavorwire Joint events intended with VIDA: Women in Literary Arts, CityLit Project, The Writers Center, the Kratz Center for Creative Writing, and more Forthcoming blurbs from Amanda Sparks, Rene Denfield, and Lydia Yuknavitch Book group outreach to social Justice Book Club at Kramerbooks, Feminist Book Club, the Gertie Book Club, Lambda Literary Online Book Club, and the Busboys and Poets Book Clubs Blurb requests out to Gina Frangello, Mary Gaitskill, Joyce Carol Oates, Eileen Miles, Janet Fitch, Jen Ponton, Gabby Rivera, Carla Ciccone, and Lili Loofbourow Special bookstore mailing to local stores, including Atomic Books, Bird in Hand, Red Emma’s, The Ivy, The Book Escape, Charlotte Elliott & The Bookstore Next Door, Kramerbooks, Politics and Prose, Greedy Reads - Baltimore, Loyalty Books, and Busboys and Poets Promotion through the author’s robust social media accounts Major awards push Co-op budget available Electronic galleys available on Edelweiss
The last place Angelina Moltisanti ever wants to go is home. She barely escaped life under the roof, and the thumb, of her violent but charismatic father, Jack. Yet home is exactly where she ends up after an SUV plows into her car just weeks after she graduates from college, fracturing her wrist and her hopes to start a career as an artist.The last place Angelina Moltisanti ever wants to go is home. She barely escaped life under the roof, and the thumb, of her violent but charismatic father, Jack. Yet home is exactly where she ends up after an SUV plows into her car just weeks after she graduates from college, fracturing her wrist and her hopes to start a career as an artist. Angelina finds herself smothered in a plaster cast, in Jack's obsessive urge to get her a giant accident settlement, in her mother Marie's desperation to have a second chance, and in her own stifled creativity - until she meets Janet, another young artist who inspires her to push herself into making the dynamic, unsettling work that tells the story of her scars, inside and out. But excavating this damage, as relations with her father become increasingly tense, will push Angelina into making a hard choice: will she embrace her father's all-consuming and empowering rage, or find another kind of strength?
"Bogart manages to thread the ghost of past violence into every scene. ... Bogart's prose is exceedingly thoughtful, and the cycle of abuse is deftly explored ... a well-crafted tale of domestic abuse and recovery." —Kirkus Reviews "An admirable first novel, full of fire and electric with emotion, about the realities of domestic abuse. ... the beating heart of the novel is its depiction of the inner world of an abuse survivor." —Washington City Paper "Intriguing and unsettling, this is a novel that plumbs the depth of violence—and love. When do we allow our scars to become our strengths? Laura Bogart has written a brilliant novel." —Rene Denfeld, bestselling author of The Child Finder and the Butterfly Girl "How do we survive a body breaking and then taking us back home to the origin site of violence? Laura Bogart's Don't You Know I Love You chronicles how a young woman artist must reimagine her life after an accident that derails her dreams. Inside the constellation we call "family" Angelina, Marie and Jack orbit around each other's stories. Under the weight of paternal violence Angelina conjures a lifestory she can live with. This is the story of a body not broken but reaching for beauty, a life not destroyed, but restoried." —Lidia Yuknavitch, author of Book of Joan "This book is so good, so difficult in all the right ways, so deeply compelling, so beautifully written, and so full of clever insight and emotional clarity about what you get from your parents and what you make for yourself. I can’t recommend it enough.” —Amber Sparks, author of And I Do Not Forgive You "Don’t You Know I Love You takes daring leaps of faith and perspective that pick up where classics like The Bluest Eye and Bastard Out of Carolina left off. Compassionate, uncompromising, surprisingly beautiful, Bogart takes us deep into the complex systems surrounding familial abuse and its far-reaching reverberations with a terrifyingly steady gaze and a courageously open heart. One of the most humane novels I have ever read." —Gina Frangello, author of Every Kind of Wanting and A Life in Men "What happens when we interrupt the narrative we were trained—into our very bones—to adhere to? Entrancing and transformative, Don’t You Know I Love You is more than a love story we haven't heard before. It’s a book that, like its narrator, defies all the stories we expect it to become. Laura Bogart writes with precision and heart." —Ariel Gore, author of Atlas of the Human Heart "Laura Bogart’s Don’t You Know I Love You is as stern and loving as it is scrupulously and even painfully fair. Bogart wields this story—about disorientation and young adulthood and abuse and art—like a scythe, sometimes cutting everyone in it down to their damaged roots and sometimes sparing them, putting them back into context with a touch both gentle and precise. Anger and nostalgia power this novel; they meld and separate and stack and resolve, and the result is dexterous, delicate and too compelling to put down." —Lili Loofbourow, staff writer at Slate "Each sentence in Laura Bogart’s gorgeous novel is achingly beautiful and necessary. Bogart, with the voice of a poet, has crafted a painful novel full of love. I couldn’t put this book down. Each character- each line of exceptional dialogue-is etched so imperfectly human that even when you know you should not care about one- you do. The gift of humanity in Don't You Know I Love You will leave you astounded and in awe. An astonishing debut!" —Jen Pastilloff, author of On Being Human "Don't You Know I Love You thrums with the fierce, undaunted heartbeat of its protagonist. Angelina is a survivor, through and through—a woman who has set herself in grit and steel, yet whose layers peel away like delicate petals at the possibility of being enough to love. A compassionate, empathetic, and thoughtful look inside an abusive household—at the love that has been strangled, the concessions made, and the fear and anger of voiceless affection. Bogart writes with a stark, brutal beauty; a tone that is enhanced by the bleak backdrop of industrial Baltimore. This is the story of a woman discovering how to claim her own power on her own terms." —Jen Ponton
ISBN: 9781950539130
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
224 pages