Peter Behrens's Blog, page 19
March 22, 2025
Don's Father's Truck. Marfa, Texas.
March 21, 2025
c.1975 Chevrolet C10. Marfa, Texas.
March 20, 2025
Looks like a Plan.
1946 Dodge. Santa Barbara, Calif.
Adanac, that evil empire to the north, is on DT's hit-list. Unless they start paying protection. We posted a 1946 Dodge Panel Delivery. And this lifted 1946 Dodge from Saskatchewan
March 19, 2025
c. 1966 Cadlillac Coupe de Ville. The Mesa (Santa Barbara, Calif.)
March 18, 2025
1962 Chevrolet Impala
From Alex Emond, on the road in the 51st state (NOT!!!) "Parked just off the Trans Canada Highway a bit west of Strathmore, Alberta. It's in pretty good shape, and the interior lookedrespectable . It has a newer big V8 in it and a Hurst shifter on the floor, even though you could see the automatic stick on the column. So it has undergone some stuff...who knows. Still, it seemed to be a solid ride. I don't think it will be sitting there very long."
AL: we have posted lots more Impalas.
March 17, 2025
c. 1975 Ford Econoline 100. Los Angeles (Mar Vista)
Then there was an Econoline pickup, down in Marfa, Texas. Another in Saskatchewan. And Nanci Griffiths' song, Ford Econoline.
The O'Briens for St Patrick's Day.
We posted about The Law of Dreams yesterday. Here's another of my Irish family novels...
The O'Briens is a major accomplishment” —
New York Times Book Review
"Time and time again, Behrens proves himself a first-rate seanchaí, the Irish term for a storyteller, by bringing the O’Brien clan to life on the page. En route, he fashions a topographically capacious narrative that relishes the scents of Santa Barbara, the pastoral beauty of the Ojai Valley and the tidal mantras of coastal Maine." — The Washington Post
Available at Amazon and Indigo. French edition is available here.
March 16, 2025
The Law of Dreams
Available at Amazon.
The Law of Dreams tells the story of a young man's Homeric passage from innocence to experience during the Irish Famine of 1847. Peter Behrens transports the reader to another time and place for a resonant, unforgettable experience. The Law of Dreams is gorgeously written in incandescent language that unleashes the sexual and psychological energies of a lost world while plunging the reader directly into a vein of history that haunts the ancestral memory of millions in a new millennium.
Absorbing, unsparing and beautifully written . . . a masterly novel. —The New York Times Book Review
The prose is frequently thrilling and always arresting. It is also unsparing in its determination to distil both the precise eternals of a moment and the fierce interiority of the human mind. The dialogue, too, seems to emerge from the mouths of characters who, though well represented in the pages of similar novels, have never been allowed to talk this way before. —Globe & Mail (Toronto)
In the life of this determined young man, Behrens illuminates one of the 19th century's greatest tragedies and the massive migration it launched. A novel that animates the past this vibrantly should make volumes of mere history blush. "Life burns hot," Fergus thinks, and so do these pages. —Washington Post Book World
When I opened Peter Behrens's "The Law of Dreams," last month, I thought, Oy vey, not another bleak, depressing, potato-famine, Irish-persecution, struggling-immigrant story. But I wound up loving this novel. The storytelling is terrific, the writing lyrical, often startling. —The New Yorker Online
One of the many fine things about Peter Behrens' stunningly lyric first novel, "The Law of Dreams," is that it is emphatically a story of that "great hunger," a work of richly empathetic imagination that reminds us once again of how powerful historical fiction can be in skilled hands. —Los Angeles Times
. . . it is one of those rare books that comes along from time to time that makes you feel that you are in the presence of greatness: a gifted storyteller with a truly compelling story to tell. —Irish Sunday Independent


