Waiting for Zoë

Nonfiction, Family & Relationships, Family Relationships, Relationships, Love/Romance
Cover of the book Waiting for Zoë by James R. Ament, Hugo House Publishers, Ltd.
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Author: James R. Ament ISBN: 1230000101826
Publisher: Hugo House Publishers, Ltd. Publication: August 5, 2011
Imprint: Language: English
Author: James R. Ament
ISBN: 1230000101826
Publisher: Hugo House Publishers, Ltd.
Publication: August 5, 2011
Imprint:
Language: English

A sweeping novel of love and loss, city and country, growing old and staying young. Waiting for Zoë is a thoughtful look at the ability of grown men and young women to confront change and absorb life's most challenging moments," writes Mark Stevens, author of Antler Dust: An Allison Coil Mystery. Waiting for Zoë is a genre-bending character driven, mainstream novel that explores a person’s ability to endure in the face of tragedy—and love. James R. Ament says, “It’s a love story, but it’s not a romance. There are underlying religious themes, but it’s not a philosophical book. There’s a little political commentary here and there, but it’s not about politics. It explores some very serious themes, but there are light moments and humor, too.” Set in Wyoming, Colorado, New York City, and Southern California, it makes the reader ask the hard question: who is in charge of creating ourselves? Ament says, “I had this story in mind about a young person who apparently has everything going for her, but then her life falls apart. The question is: Does she get it back? And if so, how?” And from writer Stephen Knapp, Evergreen Newspapers. “The characters are sharply defined and appealing, and the dialogue flows smoothly and moves the narrative along at a comfortable pace. The settings and situations are neither contrived nor trite, and the conflicts are at once challenging and accessible. In short, there’s nothing within Waiting for Zoë that marks its author as a newcomer to the literary stage,”(Reprinted with permission of Evergreen Newspapers).
"Fiction can serve extra-literary purposes. If you want to know how people in an earlier time lived their lives, don't read a history book. Read the fiction that they read…And if you want an accurate account of the kind of people who inhabit America's heartland - as a corrective to what you might have read on the op-ed pages or heard at a bien-pensant cocktail party - you just might want to take a look at Waiting for Zoë." Frank Wilson, Philadelphia Inquirer

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A sweeping novel of love and loss, city and country, growing old and staying young. Waiting for Zoë is a thoughtful look at the ability of grown men and young women to confront change and absorb life's most challenging moments," writes Mark Stevens, author of Antler Dust: An Allison Coil Mystery. Waiting for Zoë is a genre-bending character driven, mainstream novel that explores a person’s ability to endure in the face of tragedy—and love. James R. Ament says, “It’s a love story, but it’s not a romance. There are underlying religious themes, but it’s not a philosophical book. There’s a little political commentary here and there, but it’s not about politics. It explores some very serious themes, but there are light moments and humor, too.” Set in Wyoming, Colorado, New York City, and Southern California, it makes the reader ask the hard question: who is in charge of creating ourselves? Ament says, “I had this story in mind about a young person who apparently has everything going for her, but then her life falls apart. The question is: Does she get it back? And if so, how?” And from writer Stephen Knapp, Evergreen Newspapers. “The characters are sharply defined and appealing, and the dialogue flows smoothly and moves the narrative along at a comfortable pace. The settings and situations are neither contrived nor trite, and the conflicts are at once challenging and accessible. In short, there’s nothing within Waiting for Zoë that marks its author as a newcomer to the literary stage,”(Reprinted with permission of Evergreen Newspapers).
"Fiction can serve extra-literary purposes. If you want to know how people in an earlier time lived their lives, don't read a history book. Read the fiction that they read…And if you want an accurate account of the kind of people who inhabit America's heartland - as a corrective to what you might have read on the op-ed pages or heard at a bien-pensant cocktail party - you just might want to take a look at Waiting for Zoë." Frank Wilson, Philadelphia Inquirer

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