Peter Matthiessen Wheelwright's Blog, page 2
December 19, 2021
Tai chi in the Valley of Dry Bones: Compound Lexemes, Hyphens, and Metal Hinges
Published on December 19, 2021 07:36
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Tags:
bones, linguistics, tai-chi
Who’s your Daddy?: Cack-Handed Genealogies, Seashells, and Right-Angled Lines
Something for writers interested in Genealogy or Creationism:
https://www.peterwheelwright.com/whos...
https://www.peterwheelwright.com/whos...
Published on December 19, 2021 07:34
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Tags:
creationism, dna, genealogy
Making Things Up: Facts, Fiction, and Unlikeliness
Published on December 19, 2021 07:27
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Tags:
historical-fiction
December 12, 2021
Early Praise for The Door-Man
The Door-Man is a big, deep, beautiful book that ponders the mysteries of identity and existence--where we're from and what we are, and the hidden forces that bind people together and drive them apart. Peter Wheelwright has written a riveting multigenerational saga that is also a meditation on time itself--what it gives and what it takes, and ultimately, what endures.
–Catherine Chung, author of Forgotten Country and The Tenth Muse
“Like Richard Powers and Barbara Kingsolver, Peter Matthiessen Wheelwright renders the inextricable connection between natural history and human history in this beautifully layered and richly imagined novel. Wheelwright’s perceptive and observant door-man, Kinsolver, is a wonderful repository of comings and goings, past and present. As much philosopher and identity sleuth as valet, he excavates the stories of three generations from their entanglement with the geologic history of upstate New York, thereby offering escape from repetition of an aberrant past. One gets the feeling that Wheelwright knows this territory in his bones!"
—Paula Closson Buck, Author of Summer on the Cold War Planet
“Wheelwright conjures another time and world, a once-here historical intrigue as poignant as memory. Filled with insight, deft detail and wry wit, The Door Man is exactly the novelistic embrace we need in our agitated bewilderment.”
—John Reed, author of Snowball’s Chance
"A suspenseful reflection on identity and memory, with their unsparing strangeness and dreamlike fragility, The Door-Man intimates that while time does not heal all, it does elicit forgiveness. Wheelwright reminds us that, like memory itself, life does not progress steadily without opposition, but occurs in unexpected leaps and bounds, seemingly random and always incomplete. A complex and thoughtful book."
—Susanna Moore, Author of In the Cut and Miss Aluminum-A Memoir
“Starting from the political intrigue, science, and mechanics of a massive public works project—the creation of a reservoir for New York City by flooding communities in the Catskills—The Door-Man is, at one level, a historical fiction, vibrant with the colors and controversies of the region from the early 20th century, and on this strength alone, it would hold us. But Wheelwright’s writing, so rich with detail, winds across generations and brings to life a vast array of characters—from muleskinners and paleontologists to murderers and a door man. We are swept into a swirling plot that is at once suspense story, speculative fiction, romance, and comedy. And it is more than these. Just as blasting the earth in a tiny upstate town reveals a history before history, setting in motion the quest to revive a primeval forest, Wheelwright’s novel takes us deep into human motivation and beyond it, to a concept of time that dwarfs us. Like his own award-winning As It Is On Earth, The Door-Man asks each of us to reflect on our place on these American lands and among the people we’ve variously misunderstood, loved, displaced, or forgotten.”
—Derek Furr, author of Semitones and Suite for Three Voices
–Catherine Chung, author of Forgotten Country and The Tenth Muse
“Like Richard Powers and Barbara Kingsolver, Peter Matthiessen Wheelwright renders the inextricable connection between natural history and human history in this beautifully layered and richly imagined novel. Wheelwright’s perceptive and observant door-man, Kinsolver, is a wonderful repository of comings and goings, past and present. As much philosopher and identity sleuth as valet, he excavates the stories of three generations from their entanglement with the geologic history of upstate New York, thereby offering escape from repetition of an aberrant past. One gets the feeling that Wheelwright knows this territory in his bones!"
—Paula Closson Buck, Author of Summer on the Cold War Planet
“Wheelwright conjures another time and world, a once-here historical intrigue as poignant as memory. Filled with insight, deft detail and wry wit, The Door Man is exactly the novelistic embrace we need in our agitated bewilderment.”
—John Reed, author of Snowball’s Chance
"A suspenseful reflection on identity and memory, with their unsparing strangeness and dreamlike fragility, The Door-Man intimates that while time does not heal all, it does elicit forgiveness. Wheelwright reminds us that, like memory itself, life does not progress steadily without opposition, but occurs in unexpected leaps and bounds, seemingly random and always incomplete. A complex and thoughtful book."
—Susanna Moore, Author of In the Cut and Miss Aluminum-A Memoir
“Starting from the political intrigue, science, and mechanics of a massive public works project—the creation of a reservoir for New York City by flooding communities in the Catskills—The Door-Man is, at one level, a historical fiction, vibrant with the colors and controversies of the region from the early 20th century, and on this strength alone, it would hold us. But Wheelwright’s writing, so rich with detail, winds across generations and brings to life a vast array of characters—from muleskinners and paleontologists to murderers and a door man. We are swept into a swirling plot that is at once suspense story, speculative fiction, romance, and comedy. And it is more than these. Just as blasting the earth in a tiny upstate town reveals a history before history, setting in motion the quest to revive a primeval forest, Wheelwright’s novel takes us deep into human motivation and beyond it, to a concept of time that dwarfs us. Like his own award-winning As It Is On Earth, The Door-Man asks each of us to reflect on our place on these American lands and among the people we’ve variously misunderstood, loved, displaced, or forgotten.”
—Derek Furr, author of Semitones and Suite for Three Voices
Published on December 12, 2021 06:48
May 23, 2013
Now, Don't Get Me Wrong: Truth, Hidden Agendas, and Subway Phatics
Published on May 23, 2013 06:42
March 28, 2013
Philippe Petit, Limestone Cliffs, and R. W. Emerson: The Discrete Shudder of A Twittering WASP
Published on March 28, 2013 06:09
March 27, 2013
The PEN/Hemingway Award Ceremony
A few pictures from the JFK Library on March 24, 2013:
http://www.peterwheelwright.com/penhe...
http://www.peterwheelwright.com/penhe...
Published on March 27, 2013 16:48
March 21, 2013
Devotions upon Emergent Occasions, Anxiolytics and The Hemingways: For Bloom the Bell Tolls
Musings on the JFK Library PEN/Hemingway Awards Ceremony this Sunday. I'll be there, will you?
http://www.peterwheelwright.com/devot...
http://www.peterwheelwright.com/devot...
Published on March 21, 2013 05:57
March 14, 2013
Schroeder on Page 20, 'I' Tunes, and Julie Andrew's Solfège: Nitpicking in Pandora's Box
This for all who have "Do-Re-Mi" deeply lodged in their psyche. It is not what it seems.
http://www.peterwheelwright.com/schro...
http://www.peterwheelwright.com/schro...
Published on March 14, 2013 05:40
March 7, 2013
Eternity ShuffleBottom, Cuckolds, and The Descent of Man: Vlad the Impaler Dougies in Cambridge
Something for you Harvard swells and genealogy hobbyists...
http://www.peterwheelwright.com/etern...
http://www.peterwheelwright.com/etern...
Published on March 07, 2013 06:18


