advance praise for Life / Insurance, forthcoming in December

“Did the narrator push her now comatose husband down those steps in Venice?  Or is the truth far more slippery than that?  Provocative, suspenseful, funny, poetic and profound, Life / Insurance by Tara Deal explores the psyche of an unconventional woman and the complexities of love and marriage while invoking (among others): Nietzsche, García Márquez, Kerouac, Clarice Lispector, John Donne, Kate Bush, Soft Cell and Hagakure: The Book of the Samurai.  Original and rich in its use of a collage structure, its prose gemlike, Deal's novella is also an effortless and riveting must read.”

—Lyn Di Iorio, author of Outside the Bones

“Part interrogation, part dramatic monologue, Life / Insurance grapples with our biggest fears: meaning-making and uncertainty. How do you prove your worth when the values of others run counter to yours? What is a life worth to those living it versus the family members, critics, and claims adjusters who see things differently? A collage-like meditation on creativity, Life / Insurance raises questions about authenticity, intimacy, and identity. Deal builds an intricate and suspenseful mystery via a narrator who believes one has to break form—and oneself—to achieve.”

                        —Margaret Luongo, author of History of Art: Stories

“Tara Deal's Life / Insurance is a masterful puzzle, a one-way conversation that poses more questions than it answers as a wife tries to communicate with her husband.  This engaging journey into the lives of continent-hopping artists is riveting and Kafkaesque.”

            —Megan Staffel, author of The Exit Coach and The Causative Factor

“Tara Deal’s Life / Insurance is an arresting meditation on memory, marriage, and art as well as our attempts to weave the broken threads of a life into a tapestry of meaning.”

            —Melissa Reddish, author of The Lives We’ve Yet to Live

 

“In this lyrical mental collage reminiscent of Virginia Woolf, a conversation emerges out of the strangely comforting and random thoughts of one woman who keeps asking questions. A colorful and compelling meditation on art and memory.”

            —Holly Pobis, artist/photographer

 

“Found beauty in a visual and lyrical mediascape. Red herrings and clues—a brush stroke, a rhythm or a spate of words—effortlessly invoke haiku, a song or a translucent collage, each advancing a darker narrative. On tenterhooks, we hypothesize the truth at the core of an irrevocable event.”

            —Lisa Kirchner, singer/songwriter

 

“Intricate, lyrical, dissonant, impossible to pin down, Life/Insurance is to be experienced as much as it is to be read.”

            —Jim Naremore, author of The Arts of Legerdemain as Taught by Ghosts and American Still Life