Available Formats
Hieroglyphics
By (Author) Jill McCorkle
Workman Publishing
Algonquin Books
7th July 2021
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
336
Width 138mm, Height 208mm, Spine 22mm
260g
Hieroglyphicsis a novel that tugs at the deepest places of the human soula beautiful, heart piercing meditation on life and death and the marks we leave on this world. It is the work of a wonderful writer at her finest and most profound.
Jessica Shattuck, author ofThe Women in the Castle
A mesmerizing novel about the burden of secrets carried across generations.
Lil and Frank married young, launched into courtship when they bonded over how they both suddenly, tragically lost a parent when they were children. Over time, their marriage grew and strengthened, with each still wishing for so much more understanding of the parents theyd lost prematurely.
Now, after many years in Boston, theyve retired to North Carolina. There, Lil, determined to leave a history for their children, sifts through letters and notes and diary entries perhaps revealing more secrets than Frank wants their children to know. Meanwhile, Frank has become obsessed with what might have been left behind at the house he lived in as a boy on the outskirts of town, where a young single mother, Shelley, is just trying to raise her son with some sense of normalcy. Franks repeated visits to Shelleys house begin to trigger memories of her own family, memories that shed hoped to keep buried. Because, after all, not all parents are ones you wish to remember.
Hieroglyphicsreveals the difficulty of ever really knowing the intentions and dreams and secrets of the people who raised you. In her deeply layered and masterful novel, Jill McCorkle deconstructs and reconstructs what it means to be a father or a mother, and what it means to be a child piecing together the world around us, a child learning to make sense of the hieroglyphics of history and memory.
A moving and deeply appealing novel.
People
A good novel can perform the same perception-bending trick as a lockdown: slowing time, throwing light on shadowed corners, reminding us of the interdependencies among us that we once took for granted . . . Vibrant, engaging . . . McCorkle, a generous, humane writer, knows that facing death allows us, as this terrible pandemic has, to focus on what is essential: how to take care of our vulnerable, and to appreciate the connections that sustain us.
The New York Times Book Review
A bard of Southern fiction weaves a layered tale around a married couple who retire from Boston to North Carolina amid a beehive of secrets. A hidden journal, a childhood house, a long-ago fire: All emerge as keys and touchstones in McCorkles shimmering prose.
O, The Oprah Magazine
Jill McCorkle has long been one of our wryest, warmest, wisest storytellers. InHieroglyphics, she takes us on through decades, through loss, through redemption, and lands in revelation and grace. As always with McCorkle, the story feels so effortless and true that we might well miss what a high-wire act shes performing. But make no mistake: Shes up there without a net, she never misses a step, and its spectacular.
Rebecca Makkai, Pulitzer Prize finalist for The Great Believers
Hieroglyphicsis a novel that tugs at the deepest places of the human soula beautiful, heart piercing meditation on life and death and the marks we leave on this world. It is the work of a wonderful writer at her finest and most profound.
Jessica Shattuck, author ofThe Women in the Castle
Jill McCorkle at her besta masterful storyteller noting the complications of life with a heart full of empathy.
Garden Gun
Wise and tender,Hieroglyphicscaptures life itself: the experiences that shape us and bind us to one another, and the moments of terror and grace we carry in our hearts. Jill McCorkle's new novel is a triumph.
Claire Messud, author ofThe Burning Girl
A thoroughly existential story that inspects mortality, the passage of time and the inadequacies of human communication . . . [McCorkles] mastery of words as a vehicle to deliver raw emotions never wavers. Hieroglyphics dwells in nostalgia and the inevitable pain thats built into the contract of life, but like a good therapy session, it proves rewarding.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
The real joy ofHieroglyphicsis its intricacy, the pieces of four stories assembled into a mosaic of love and pain and redemption . . . the plain and elegant style pulls the reader through its shifts and counterpoints. You emerge bedazzled, blinking in the bright sunlight of now and carrying the shards of their experiences in your heart. McCorkle is a gracious stylist who hides a whip-smart gift behind her Southern charm. She knows how to tell a good story.
Washington Independent Review of Books
Hieroglyphicsis suffused with a deep and heartening understanding of human resilience and strength. A beautiful and emotionally satisfying novel."
Brad Watson, author ofMiss Jane
Engrossing . . . McCorkle finds an elegant mix of wistfulness and appreciation for life . . . Throughout, McCorkle weaves a powerful narrative web, with empathy for her characters and keen insight on their motivations. This is a gem.
Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Ingenious . . .Gathers layers like a snowball racing downhill before striking us in the heart with blunt, icy force."
Kirkus Reviews,starred review
"A powerful evocation of loss and yearning . . . McCorkle testifies to the ageless nobility of human beings who want the next generation to do better. A deeply moving and insightful triumph."
Booklist, starred review
"Demonstrating her widely recognized skill at creating memorable stories out of the stuff of daily life, McCorkle's empathy for a quartet of unassuming but appealing characters provides the foundation for a novel whose drama is modest, but whose insight is deep. Jill McCorkle is an unfussy writer whose storytelling skill almost gives the impression she's simply eavesdropping on her character's lives. It's that quiet talent that makes Hieroglyphics a novel whose appeal will only enlarge in the reader's mind with the passage of time."
Shelf Awareness
No one has a more captivating storytelling style than McCorkle, and her narrative gifts are on full display inHieroglyphics. As in her previous novel, Life After Life, she does a masterful job of weaving a whole from many parts. Revelations about all the characters arrive slowly, finally reaching a conclusion that is fully satisfying, as soaked in love and sorrow as every human life.
Chapter16.org
McCorkle is an insightful, skillful writer.
New York Journal of Books
McCorkle is known for being a funny and astute chronicler of everyday life. Hieroglyphics . . .is a layered and powerful meditation on parenthood, loss and family history, and yet it has the easy feel of an entertaining neighbor spinning a tale on the porch while shelling peas.
Savannah Morning News
Jill McCorkles novels are always worth the wait. Thats certainly true of Hieroglyphics. Few books are so honest and true to life, yet so ultimately uplifting. Shes a master of the art of weaving a story, through just the right details, nuances and anecdotes, for us to decipher as we read.
Greensboro News Record
McCorkles book is deeply layered, deconstructing and reconstructing what it means to be a parent, and what it means to be a child trying to make sense of history and memory.
Winston-Salem Journal
Hieroglyphics is a powerful, deeply moving testament to both theties of family and the taut fragility of memory's plumb-line. Shelley, Harvey, Lil and Frank felt so real that it seemed as if I had known them for many years; this book stayed with me well beyond the last page.
Daniel Mason, author of The Winter Soldier
Jill McCorkles first two novels were released simultaneously when she was just out of college, and the New York Times called her a born novelist. Since then, she has published six novels and four collections of short stories, and her work has appeared in Best American Short Stories several times, as well as The Norton Anthology of Short Fiction. Five of her books have been New York Times Notable books, and her most recent novel, Life After Life, was a New York Times bestseller. She has received the New England Booksellers Award, the John Dos Passos Prize for Excellence in Literature, and the North Carolina Award for Literature. She has written for the New York Times Book Review, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe, Garden and Gun, the Atlantic, and other publications. She was a Briggs-Copeland Lecturer in Fiction at Harvard, where she also chaired the department of creative writing. She is currently a faculty member of the Bennington College Writing Seminars and is affiliated with the MFA program at North Carolina State University.