praise for Sight Unseen


 

Sight Unseen follows three innocents in New Orleans: Claire, a photographer; her husband Simon, who runs a plant nursery; and their dog Hank, the middleman. Claire feeds her hungry eyes on the gorgeous green life, rising from this strange city, while Simon digs into the rich alluvial soil, coaxing young shoots from the mud. The story opens in May 1995, on the night of a terrific flood, a “rain event” that sets their home afloat. So many plans, so much water. Amidst this ruin, the couple also grapples with conflicting desires around parenthood. In their foundering attempts to have a child, their marriage is tested by the deeper desolation exposed in the fallout from this immense loss. By the next hurricane threat six months later, Claire and Simon must learn how to survive, literally and figuratively, together or apart. As Claire reaches new ground in her work as a photographer, she sharpens her ability to see herself, her husband, and world they made with greater honesty, and fashions a life raft from the wreckage of her mistakes.

 

Read An Excerpt

In Blackbird

Nonna Tears Apart a Chicken

Constance Adler's arresting debut novel traces the thin line between reality and the hazy terrain of assumption, desire, and remorse. In New Orleans, a city of bloom and rot, two lovers dig into the wreckage of their own worst instincts, with profound results. This is a book of visions, about how we anchor the body and trust the unspoken. Tenderly written, Sight Unseen is a hymn to the visceral world.  —  Katy Simpson Smith, author of The Everlasting and The Weeds

Like the constant storms that threaten and assault this novel’s sharply rendered setting, New Orleans, Constance Adler’s seductively powerful Sight Unseen gathers intensity as the tumult of personal loss builds into a raging exploration of one woman’s history. With stunning detail and a quiet ferocity, Adler scours an emotional lineage rife with endurance, fury, magic, and, ultimately, reclamation. —  Adrianne Harun, author of On the Way to the End of the World

Sight Unseen is spellbinding. A luminous map of pain, night vision, and healing, Constance Adler has reimagined the ghost story as a profound ode to the animal self, the bonds that sustain us, and the sacred scars of loss and a life fully, wildly lived. Mesmerizing. —  Margot Douaihy, author of Scorched Grace and Blessed Water