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The Silences of Ararat

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It’s an old, old story: the King loses what passes for his mind and accuses his perfect trophy wife of adultery and prepares to have her put to death. Temporary insanity, right? Often in such cases, there’s collateral damage, and that’s the case in this story. But who, in a monarchy like Ararat, can oppose the King? Enter, Paulina, stage left, a sculptor with a hidden talent, a dea ex machina with her own ideas about how this story should end.

118 pages, ebook

Published March 1, 2021

13 people want to read

About the author

L. Timmel Duchamp

59 books27 followers
L. Timmel Duchamp was born in 1950, the first child of three. Duchamp first began writing fiction in a library carrel at the University of Illinois in 1979, for a joke. But the joke took on a life of its own and soon turned into a satirical roman a clef in the form of a murder mystery titled "The Reality Principle." When she finished it, she allowed the novel to circulate via photocopies, and it was a great hit in the academic circles in which she then moved. One night in the fall of 1984 she sat down at her mammoth Sanyo computer with its green phosphorescent screen and began writing Alanya to Alanya.

Duchamp spent the next two years in a fever, writing the Marq'ssan Cycle. When she finshed it, she realized she didn't know how to market it to publishers and decided that publishing some short fiction (which she had never tried to write before) would be helpful for getting her novels taken seriously. Her first effort at a short story was "Welcome, Kid, to the Real World," which she wrote in the summer of 1986. Her next effort, however, turned into a novel. (Getting the hang of the shorter narrative form was a lot harder than she'd anticipated.) So she decided to stick with novels for a while. When in fall 1987 a part-time job disrupted her novel-writing, she took the short stories of Isak Dinesen for her model, tried again, and wrote "Negative Event at Wardell Station, Planet Arriga" and "O's Story." And in 1989 she sold "O's Story" to Susanna J. Sturgis for Memories and Visions, "The Forbidden Words of Margaret A." to Kristine Kathryn Rusch for Pulphouse: The Hardback Magazine, and "Transcendence" to the shortlived Starshore. Her first pro sale, though, was "Motherhood, Etc." to Bantam for the Full Spectrum anthology series.

After that she wrote a lot of short fiction (mostly at novelette and novella lengths), a good deal of which she sold to Asimov's SF. In the late 1990s Nicola Griffith convinced her to try her hand at writing criticism and reviews. In 2004, Duchamp founded Aqueduct Press; since then editing and publishing books (her own as well as other writers') has claimed the lion's share of her time and effort.

She lives in Seattle.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Caroline Bock.
Author 13 books96 followers
June 30, 2021
An absolutely captivating short novel (only p. 116)-- about palace intrigue, artistry and witchery in one of the member states of the Congress of Christian American States. A perfect page-turning, fast-read for our divided, divisive times told by Paulina, the wise sculptor and advisor to the King and Queen (though a little more to the Queen, but no spoilers here-- read THE SILENCES OF ARARAT!!)!

--Caroline
Profile Image for Geoff Clarke.
361 reviews
April 4, 2021
I don't know how the author does it: I envy her talent to not just create toxic male dystopias, but also make her stories sing right through them.

The realized christian fundamentalist world the author creates is spare, we just see the barest framework of it. But it's enough to show that living there would very much distort people's lives and discourse.

It's a great read and I'm happy to own it.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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