An Arsonist's Guide to Writers' Homes in New England (Hardcover)
by Brock Clarke
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Overview
As a teenager, it was never Sam Pulsifer's intention to torch an American landmark, and he certainly never planned to kill two people in the blaze. To this day, he still wonders why that young couple was upstairs in bed in the Emily Dickinson House after hours.
After serving ten years in prison for his crime, Sam is determined to put the past behind him. He fifinishes college, begins a career, falls in love, gets married, has two adorable kids, and buys a home. His low-profifile life is chugging along quite nicely until the past comes crashing through his front door.
As the homes of Robert Frost, Edith Wharton, Herman Melville, and Nathaniel Hawthorne, and even a replica of Henry David Thoreau's cabin at Walden Pond, go up in smoke, Sam becomes the number one suspect. Finding the real culprit is the only way to clear his name--but sometimes there's a terrible price to pay for the truth.
"An Arsonist's Guide to Writers' Homes in New England" is a tour de force--a novel disguised as a memoir, a mystery that cloaks itself in humor, and an artful piece of literature that bites the hand that breeds it.
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- ISBN-13: 9781565125513
- ISBN-10: 1565125517
- Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
- Date: September 2007
- Page Count: 305
Customer Reviews
BookPage™ Reviews
Playing with fire
In his arrestingly titled second novel, Brock Clarke invites us to ponder the spell literature can cast and the sometimes incendiary power of books. An Arsonist's Guide to Writers' Homes in New England is a tenderhearted black comedy that's reminiscent of classic works like John Irving's The World According to Garp.
Sam Pulsifer, the novel's narrator, is 18 years old when he's given a 10-year prison sentence for accidentally burning down the Emily Dickinson House, killing a young couple engaged in a tryst in an upstairs bedroom. After his release, Sam enrolls in college, abandoning an English major for a degree in packaging science. He marries, fathers two children and moves into a suburban development called Camelot. It seems he has put his unfortunate past behind him and is well positioned to capture his slice of the American dream.
What Sam discovers as he embarks on his idyllic new life is that while the past may be over, it never truly disappears. Believing he's a pyromaniac, more than 100 people have written letters urging Sam to torch the houses of other famous New England writers. When those houses become the targets of arsonists, Sam finds himself the prime suspect and he assumes the role of amateur detective, hoping to uncover the criminal's identity. In the end, the touching truths Sam unearths about himself, his family and even life itself turn out to be more moving and profound than his solution to the arson mystery.
What makes An Arsonist's Guide such an engaging and wildly original work is the captivating voice of Sam Pulsifer. His instincts are admirable and pure, and yet he's consistently saddled with the consequences of his bad choices. Interspersed with his wry musings on the events unfolding around him are hilarious comments on literary phenomena like the explosion of the memoir genre and reading groups. Like all of literature's most compelling characters, it's hard to say goodbye to him when we turn the final page.
Harvey Freedenberg writes from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
- ISBN-13: 9781565125513
- ISBN-10: 1565125517
- Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
- Date: September 2007
- Page Count: 305
Publishers Weekly® Reviews
- Reviewed in: Publishers Weekly, page 38.
- Review Date: 2007-05-07
- Reviewer: Staff
Clarke's fourth book (after the story collection Carrying the Torch) is the delightfully dark story of Sam Pulsifer, the “accidental arsonist and murderer” narrator who leads readers through a multilayered, flame-filled adventure about literature, lies, love and life. Growing up in Amherst, Mass., with an editor for a father and an English teacher for a mother, Sam was fed endless stories that fueled (literally and figuratively) the rest of his life. Thus, the blurred boundaries between fact and fiction, story and reality become the landscape for amusing and provocative adventures that begin when, at age 18, Sam accidentally torches the Emily Dickinson Homestead, killing two people. After serving 10 years, Sam tries to distance himself from his past through college, employment, marriage and fatherhood, but he eventually winds up back in his parents' home, separated from his wife and jobless. When more literary landmarks go up in flames, Sam is the likely suspect, and his determination to find the actual arsonist uncovers family secrets and more than a bit about human nature. Sam is equal parts fall guy and tour guide in this bighearted and wily jolt to the American literary legacy. (Sept.)
- ISBN-13: 9781565125513
- ISBN-10: 1565125517
- Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
- Date: September 2007
- Page Count: 305









