Above the Thunder
by Renee Manfredi
List Price: $13.95
Pages: 352
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 1400078504
Publisher: Anchor

Renee Manfredi received her MFA from Indiana University, a fellowship from The National Endowment for the Arts, and was a regional winner of Granta's Best American Novelists Under 40. Her story collection, Where Love Leaves Us, won the Iowa Short Fiction award. Her short stories have been published in The Mississippi Review, The Iowa Review, The Georgia Review, and the Pushcart Prize anthology, and were featured in NPR's "Selected Shorts" series. Manfredi is currently an Associate Professor at the University of Alaska. Above the Thunder is her first novel.
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Q: All your characters struggle with loss, yet they all in their own way refuse to surrender to it. Did that come as a surprise to you?
RM: Every fictional character I can think of is defined by loss; there's no novel in which all the characters have plenty of everything. Yet some of the writers I most admire --- Jane Austen, Michael Cunningham, Anne-Marie MacDonald --- provide hope in equal measure with loss. This is what I wanted for my characters.
Q: Your eleven-year-old heroine is such an independent and captivating girl. Where did Flynn come from?
RM: In the early drafts of the novel, Flynn was a fairly typical child. Because she was so hyperattuned to her environment, though, she began to draw in the other characters' strong emotions, and she became the one who always spoke the truth, even if the truth was more emotional than factual. Her eccentricity emerged in part from her tendency to say what the others were unable or unwilling to express.
Q: Your novel isn't a comic one, yet a few of your scenes are extremely funny. How do humor and tragedy co-exist so comfortably in your writing?
RM: I think humor is a survival strategy. Some of my characters get through tragedy in moments of high comedy: Jack has his moments of giddiness; and Anna turns to an eccentric neighbor when grief becomes too much.
Q: The four main characters constitute one of the most unconventional families in fiction. Is this a subject that has especially interested you?
RM: The theme of family and belonging evolved naturally from the characters. I didn't know when I started the novel that the characters would become so vital to one another.
Q: Do you feel your work explores any subject that doesn't get much attention in fiction?
RM: What may be a departure is having characters that deal with grief, loss and love in unconventional ways. My work may be more sympathetic to spirituality than most contemporary American fiction. In other literary traditions, spirituality, the mystery of what can't be measured or seen, is more of a given–Isabel Allende's House of the Spirits is a case in point. One of the characters in Above the Thunder explores grief, loss, and love by talking to the dead, reviewing other lives, and having visions.
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Excerpted from Above the Thunder © Copyright 2008 by Renee Manfredi. Reprinted with permission by Anchor. All rights reserved.
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