the old world - cary fagan.jpg

The Old World

Cary Fagan

Imprint: House of Anansi / Format: Paper / publication date: February 2017 / 300 pages / ISBN: 978-1487001469 / Price: $19.95

These thirty-five brief stories — and the found photographs that inspired them — are by turns realistic and surreal, bloody and tender, delightful and appalling. Award-winning author Cary Fagan has created a mesmerizing series of narrative tales, giving readers a vivid peek into lives of strangers.

A man hangs onto a runaway horse. A woman paints in the nude. A shop window advertising a sale on blankets hides much more behind it. A lone tombstone on a hill speaks of a years-long feud. The stories — capturing portraits, objects, moments in time — while dizzyingly varied, form a single image that, in the words of the author, “belong to one history, found in an album that might belong to any of us.”

Deftly marrying vision and language with memory and imagination, Fagan paints an intimate portrait of forgotten lives that is profound, generous, and highly entertaining.

“I absolutely loved this collection of very short stories inspired by a series of wonderful found photographs. Cary Fagan has a real ear for dialogue and a way of making each perfectly formed vignette surprising, whether that’s taking a surreal turn in ‘We Have to Be Careful,’ introducing the macabre in ‘Who I've Come For,’ or quietly breaking my heart, in ‘Where We Are Now.’ ” — Claire Fuller, author of Swimming Lessons

“What a dazzlingly imaginative thing to do — Cary Fagan has taken a group of orphaned photographs from the past and turned them into a cabinet of wonders! Inventive, satisfying, and deft, The Old World gets right to the heart of the storytelling craft.”
— Marni Jackson, author of Don't I Know You?

“Charming, funny, and sad.” — National Post

“This is Fagan at the top of his game.” — The Canadian Jewish News

“A remarkable collection.” — Maple Tree Literary Supplement

“A series of enchanting short stories of astonishing breadth. Readers will be transported and wish for more.” — Publishers Weekly