The Wives of Los Alamos
By (Author) TaraShea Nesbit
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
22nd April 2015
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
240
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
171g
Their average age was twenty-five. They came from Berkeley, Cambridge, Paris, London and Chicago and arrived in New Mexico ready for adventure or at least resigned to it. But hope quickly turned to hardship in the desolate military town where everything was a secret, including what their husbands were doing at the lab. They lived in barely finished houses with a P.O. Box for an address, in a town wreathed with barbed wire, all for the benefit of the project that didnt exist as far as the greater world was concerned. They were constrained by the words they couldnt say out loud, the letters they couldnt send home, the freedom they didnt have. Though they were strangers, they joined together babies were born, friendships were forged, children grew up. But then the project was unleashed and even bigger challenges faced the women of Los Alamos, as they struggled with the burden of their contribution towards the creation of the most destructive force in mankinds history the atomic bomb. Contentious, gripping and intimate, The Wives of Los Alamos is a personal tale of one of the most momentous events in our history.
In this fascinating and artful debut, TaraShea Nesbit gives voice to the women closest to one of gravest and most telling moments in our collective history: the development and testing of the nuclear bomb at Los Alamos. Tender and mundane details of marriage and domesticity quietly collide with the covert and solemn work at hand. With chilling implications and charged, sure-footed prose, this is a novel and writer of consequence * Paula McLain, author of The Paris Wife *
Hypnotic and filled with elegiac details; Nesbit offers fascinating and disturbing insight into the secret life of the Los Alamos families * Madeline Miller, author of The Song of Achilles *
I am in awe of this novel. TaraShea Nesbits brave and brilliant choice of point of view for these women living inside their earth-shattering secret crucible brings home to us in the fullest way possible that our personal story is never just ours. The Wives of Los Alamos will be read and re-read and remembered * Gail Godwin, author of Flora *
A debut novel that manages to be both intimate and detached and is all the more compelling for that **** * RTE Guide *
The story is told by all of the women not queued up as an oral history , but together in unison as one haunting, communal voice In the hands of a less certain writer, the narrative style might become grating, but Nesbit pulls it off with impressive control. Lulled by the voice, we know that offstage the historic work is being done Because we already know the big story, the wives tale this diverse, incongruous ensemble becomes that much more interesting * New York Times *
TaraShea Nesbit teaches creative writing and literature courses at the University of Denver and the University of Washington in Tacoma. A graduate of the MFA program at Washington University in St. Louis, TaraShea is currently studying for a PhD in Creative Writing at the University of Denver, where she is a Presidential Fellow.