"Thirty years
ago, Cassandra Neary’s grim photos of punks and corpses briefly
made her the toast of the downtown art scene. Now an alcoholic wage
slave, Neary accepts a magazine assignment to interview one of her
reclusive photographer heroes on a Maine island, where a rash of missing-teenager
cases and an off-kilter populace grab her attention. It takes time
to warm to the self-destructive, sour-tempered protagonist –she
drives drunk, pops Adderall and Percocet, and generally tries to not
stick out her neck. Luckily, Hand’s terse but transporting prose
keeps the reader turning pages until Neary’s gritty charm does,
finally, shine through." (B)
-- Entertainment
Weekly
"Although Generation
Loss moves like a thriller, it detonates with greater resound."
-- Graham Joyce, Washington
Post Book World
"This novel
disturbs like Cass’s photos of dead junkies and squalid club
scenes. While in some ways she’s just another self-destructive
person, Cass’s intelligence and talent make her an appealing
mess. Hand propels this oddly appealing character through an old-fashioned
mystery-thriller with stirring results. In the end, Generation
Loss is a conventional story of sin and redemption. With darkly
inventive polish, Hand reveals a character so deeply disordered, she’s
both unlikable and compelling."
—Time
Out Chicago
"Cass is a marvel,
someone with whom we take the difficult journey toward delayed adulthood,
wishing her encouragement despite grave odds."
-- Los
Angeles Times
"This smart,
dark, literary thriller will keep you up at night. A photographer
who has been drinking, doing drugs, and alienating everyone around
her since the '70s goes to Maine to interview a legendary photographer
and gets caught up in the case of a missing girl."
-- Megan Sullivan's Pick of the Week at the Boston
Globe
"This long-awaited
fantasy novel brings an end to the critically acclaimed Aegypt quartet
that takes 'the vast jigsaw that Crowley has assembled in the first
three books – and places them in a picture that's open, smiling,
filled with possibility....gracefully written, beautifully characterized,
moving, and thought-provoking.... [Graham Sleight]'"
-- Locus
Notable Books
"Just as lives
that are only momentarily brilliant deserve celebration and respect,
though, so do such novels, because life is dark enough that we need
whatever illumination we can get, and there's plenty to be had in
Generation Loss."
-- Strange
Horizons
"A formerly
famous punk photographer attracted to the dead and damaged stumbles
on a serial killer case when she takes a job inteviewing a famous
reclusive photographer in this dark thriller of art and damaged souls,
and despite only a hint of the supernatural, '...something of a departure
for the author, but fully as elegant and significant as her overtly
fantastic works. There is grave beauty her, and great thematic power.'
[Nick Gevers]"
-- Valley
Advocate
"Hand (Mortal
Love, Black Light) expertly ratchets up the suspense until it’s
at the level of a high-pitched scream near novel’s end."
-- Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
* "Hand (Mortal
Love) explores the narrow boundary between artistic genius and
madness in this gritty, profoundly unsettling literary thriller."
-- Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Ægypt is a metamorphosis,
a metensomatosis, a memory play and a meta-novel; a story about many
stories, a book with a larger book inside it. The further in you go,
the bigger it gets."
-- Elizabeth Hand, F&SF
"Cass Neary, Elizabeth Hand’s
unlikely heroine in her latest novel Generation Loss, may
be hard to like, but I found her story is easy to love."
-- Feminist
Review
"A dark, literate mystery
that's easy to appreciate and hard to put down."
-- The
Olympian
"The novel crackles
with energy: it is alive."
-- Nicholas
Rombes, (The Ramones and New Punk Cinema)
"Intense and
atmospheric, Generation Loss is an inventive brew of postpunk
attitude and dark mystery. Elizabeth Hand writes with craftsmanship
and passion."
-- George Pelecanos
"Lucid and beautifully
rendered. Great, unforgiving wilderness, a vanished teenager, an excellent
villain, and an obsession with art that shades into death: what else
do you need? An excellent book."
-- Brian Evenson, The Open Curtain