"The tales in this exquisite collection, set largely in Canada, are expertly paced and finely observed . . . [Macleod's] eye is severe but not unfair, venerating the mingled beauty and horror of entangled existences." –Mike Peed, The New York Times Book Review
"A brilliant collection . . . Macleod offers piercing insights into how his characters see themselves in relation to their families.
This is a winner." –
Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) "
Meticulous . . . MacLeod's second collection abounds with crystallized moments in time." –
Kirkus Reviews "The eight stories in "Animal Person" are deceptive . . . MacLeod writes with an almost colloquial style, easy-going and easy-reading. This straightforwardness obscures just how complex these stories are, leaving them to
explode within the reader's mind and heart." –Robert J. Wiersema,
The Toronto Star "
Engrossing . . . Populated by family and acquaintances of all stripes, MacLeod's sly tales find characters reconsidering present assumptions and the unknown expanses of their own futures and those of the worlds they inhabit." –Leah Strauss,
Booklist "These stories center on moments–some dramatic, some seemingly small–when lives are altered irrevocably.
MacLeod is a gifted stylist, and all the more impressive for his subtlety. While each story in Animal Person is memorable,
"The Closing Date" is the volume's masterpiece, and one of the most powerful and unnerving stories I have ever read." –Ron Rash, author of
In the Valley "
Animal Person is
easily the most compelling and captivating collection of short fiction that I have read in many, many years. It is humorous, suspenseful, compassionate, entertaining, mysterious, even wise, but it is also a book that doesn't shrink from plucking the chord of anxiety that has become the bass note thrumming in the twenty-first century.
A virtuoso performance by a writer in the vanguard of contemporary short story writers." –Guy Vanderhaeghe, author of
August into Winter "Alexander MacLeod i
s a writer of extraordinary subtlety. The pleasure in these stories is as much in the journey as the destination." –David Bezmozgis, author of
Immigrant City "
A talent so vivid." –Souvankham Thammavongsa, author of
How to Pronounce Knife "These
tender, funny and ever-surprising stories all hint, in one way or another, at the impermanence of everything–and how impossible that impermanence always seems when you're caught up in the pulsating bloodstream of life." –Lynn Coady, author of
Hellgoing