Nirvana Is Here: A Novel
By (Author) Aaron Hamburger
Three Rooms Press
Three Rooms Press
20th August 2019
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Winner of Rome Prize 2004 (United States)
Paperback
380
Width 139mm, Height 209mm
WINNER, BRONZE MEDAL, FOREWORD REVIEWS 2019 INDIE AWARD For Best LGBTQ+ Fiction
For Ari Silverman, the past has never really passed. After 20 years, the trauma from a childhood assault resurfaces as he grapples with the fate of his ex-husband, a colleague accused of sexually harassing a student. To gain perspective, Ari arranges to reconnect with his high school crush, Justin Jackson, a bold step which forces him to reflect on their relationship in the segregated suburbs of Detroit during the 1990s and the secrets they still share.
An honest story about recovery and coping with both past and present, framed by the meteoric rise and fall of the band Nirvana and the wide-reaching scope of the #metoo movement, Nirvana is Here explores issues of identity, race, sex, and family with both poignancy and unexpected humor. Deftly told intertwining stories with rich, real characters are reminiscent of the sensuality and haunting nostalgia of Andr Acimans Call Me By Your Name blended with the raw emotion of Kurt Cobains lyrics.
Written by award-winning writer Aaron Hamburger, Nirvana Is Here is a wonder of a book, according to acclaimed novelist Lauren Grodstein (Our Short History). As a Jewish Gen-Xer, the novel reminded me exactly of who I once wasand all that I still want to be. . . . a brilliant accomplishment.
WINNER, BRONZE MEDAL, FOREWORD REVIEWS 2019 INDIE AWARD For Best LGBTQ+ Fiction
"BAY AREA REPORTER 2019 Pride List"
"A tender self-reckoning, Nirvana Is Here brings the past full circle. Hamburger deftly reveals how incidents recedeeven if they leave their markto bring new hopes into focus. Foreword Reviews
Deft characterization of a person who seeks to close the space between the past and present self. Lambda Literary Review
"Hamburger is tender and provocative in his examinations of sexual abuse, racial strife in 90s Detroit, and the way that discovering Nirvana changes everything about Aris world. The complexities of this novel are deftly handled by Hamburger, whose sensitive and observant prose is a pure joy to read on every page." Electric Literature
Spare and devastating. Perfectly captures the voice of the wistful adolescent in such a pitch-perfect, heartbreaking way. Readasurus Reviews
Nirvana is Here is told with irony and apleasing lightness. . . . Nirvana songs and adolescent musings about Kurt Cobain pepper the book, giving it a gritty, sardonic edge. Jewish Book Council
"An expertly written, bold, funny, serious novel." The Rupture Magazine
Both timely and refreshing in its complexity,Nirvana is Heregets to the heart of matters and revels in the glory of accepting ones against-the-grain identity. Hyype
A work that effectively weaves the elements of growing up in the 1990s, addressing race/privilege/sexuality, confronting awful truths and realizing consequences have meaning throughout your life. It makes for a very good read indeed. QueerGuru
Nirvana is Here is a beautiful, but sad, coming-of-age story that is a heartily welcome addition to the LGBTQ literature pantheon. I Like to Read
Quite simply, this is a coming of age story but it is also so much more; it is a story of recovery and dealing with both past and present as set against the band Nirvana. . . . Hamburger beautifully captures the decade of the 90s and his characters who come of age then. Reviews by Amos Lassen
"If your idea of Heaven is sitting down with a beautifully written book full of complex, compelling characters, then get ready.Nirvana is Here! This is a drop-everything, stay-up-way-too-late, unputdownable novel written by an amazingly talented author. Funny, sexy, wise, and thought-provoking, Nirvana Is Here is a book that has it all, speaks to our times, and is an absolutely necessary read." Lesla Newman, author October Mourning: A Song for Matthew Shepard and Heather Has Two Mommies
A yearning, generous, coming-of-age journey. Captures both a decade, and those scary, vital moments we reveal who we are, inside. Aaron Hamburgers prose is alive: whats here is funny, painful, heartbreaking. If you miss (or missed) the 1990s, read this book Nirvana Is Here. Brando Skyhorse, author ofThe Madonnas of Echo ParkandTake This Man
With rich, real characters and an evocative sense of time and place, Aaron Hamburger movingly explores the ways our pasts accompany us into our future lives.Nirvana Is Hereis tender, wise and deeply affecting. Tova Mirvis, author, The Book of Separation
"Aaron Hamburgers Nirvana Is Here is a wonder of a book, often funny, sometimes heartbreaking, and always enormously honest about what it means to be young and in love. As a Jewish Gen-Xer, the novel reminded me exactly of who I once was--and all that I still want to be. Nirvana Is Here is a brilliant accomplishment." Lauren Grodstein, author of Our Short History
"Like everything Hamburger writes, Nirvana Is Here is compulsively readable, charming, and suffused with deep humanity. The title is truth in advertising, folks: this novel is nirvana indeed." Elisa Albert, author, After Birth
A touching, finely wrought portrait of secrets lying like buried ordinance beneath ordinary lives. The delicacy and observational wit of Aaron Hamburgers prose are a marvel. Louis Bayard, author, Courting Mr. Lincoln
Aaron Hamburger is the author of a story collection titledThe View from Stalin's Head(Random House), winner of the Rome Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. His second book, the novel Faith for Beginners (Random House), was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award. His writing has appeared inThe New York Times,The Washington Post,The Chicago Tribune,O, the Oprah Magazine, Details, The Village Voice,Poets & Writers,Tin House,Out, Michigan Quarterly Review, The Forward and numerous other publications. In addition, he has also won fellowships from Yaddo, Djerassi, the Civitella Ranieri Foundation, and the Edward F. Albee Foundation as well as first prize in the Dornstein Contest for Young Jewish Writers. He has taught creative writing at Columbia University, the George Washington University, New York University, Brooklyn College, and the Stonecoast MFA Program. He currently resides in Washington, D.C.