Orange Alert

Novelist Ruth Ozeki Concludes Fall Carver Reading Series

Latest novel, 'A Tale for the Time Being,' short-listed for Man-Booker Prize

Dec. 2, 2014, by Renée K. Gadoua

Novelist Ruth Ozeki will conclude the Fall 2014 Raymond Carver Reading Series in Syracuse University's College of Arts and Sciences with a reading on Wednesday, Dec. 3, in Gifford Auditorium. A Q&A session is from 3:45-4:30 p.m., followed by the reading.

The event is free and open to the public. Parking is available in Syracuse’s paid lots.

Ozeki’s most recent work, “A Tale for the Time Being” (Viking/Canongate, 2013), was short-listed for the Man Booker Prize, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction and won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in Fiction.

The New York Times praised the novel as a complex autobiographical parable. “This is a book that does not give up its multiple meanings easily,” the Times wrote. It “gently but insistently (instructs) the reader to progress slowly in order to contemplate the porous membrane that separates fact from fiction, self from circumstance, past from present.”

The story involves an introspective novelist named Ruth who finds a Japanese girl’s diary washed up on the coast of British Columbia. Ruth and her husband, Oliver, live on a Canadian island, far from their former home in New York City. Ruth tries to find the diary’s author, Nao (pronounced “now,” suggesting a double meaning), and embarks on a search that raises questions about identity, reality, and connections. As if responding to the novel’s title, Ruth says, "Life is fleeting! Don't waste a single moment of your precious life! … Wake up now! … And now! … And now!"

Ozeki's first two novels are “My Year of Meats” (Viking Adult, 1998) and “All Over Creation” (Viking Adult, 2003). Ozeki is also a filmmaker and a Zen Buddhist priest.

In an interview with abebooks.com, Ozeki discussed the relationship between reader and writer, a theme of “A Tale for the Time Being.” “ … I just see them as a continuum, I don't see them as being separate,” she said. “Writing is a response to reading—it's sort of a conversation, and you can't have a conversation by yourself. It's a conversation that unfolds over time.”

Ozeki is this year's David Edelstein and Jennie Berkson Distinguished Author. Her visit to campus is supported by a generous gift from Syracuse Trustee David Edelstein '78 and his wife, Jennie Berkson.

Presented by the Department of English, the Raymond Carver Reading Series is named for the great short story writer and poet who taught at Syracuse in the 1980s. The series is presented as part of the popular undergraduate course "Living Writers," which brings 12 to 14 prominent writers to campus each year to read their works and interact with students.

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