Scorpionfish, Natalie Bakopoulos
Scorpionfish, Natalie Bakopoulos
List: $35.99 | Sale: $25.20
Club: $17.99

Scorpionfish

Author: Natalie Bakopoulos

Narrator: Hillary Huber, Malcolm Hillgartner

Unabridged: 7 hr 27 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/07/2020


Synopsis

A Best Summer Read at The Daily Beast and AlmaA captivating and transporting travel novel, Scorpionfish reveals how what we leave behind may be exactly what we've been looking for all along.After the unexpected deaths of her parents, academic Mira returns to her childhood home in Athens. On her first night back, she encounters a new neighbor, a longtime ship captain who has found himself, for the first time in years, no longer at sea. As one summer night tumbles into another, Mira and the Captain’s voices drift across the balconies of their apartments, disclosing details and stories: of careers, of families, of love.For Mira, love has so often meant Aris, an ex-boyfriend and rising Greek politician who has recently become engaged to a movie star. There is, too, her love for her dear friend Nefeli―a well-known artist who came of age during the military dictatorship―as well as Dimitra and Fady, a couple caring for a young refugee boy. Undergirding each relationship is the love that these characters have for Athens, a beautiful but complicated city that is equal parts lushness and sharp edges.Scorpionfish is a map of how and where we find our true selves: in the pull of the sea; the sway of late-night bar music; the risk and promise of art; and in the sparkling, electric, summertime charge of endless possibility. Award-winning author Natalie Bakopoulos braids a story of vulnerability, desire, and bittersweet truth, unraveling old ways of living and, in the end, creating something new.

About Natalie Bakopoulos

Natalie Bakopoulos is the author of the novels Scorpionfish (Tin House, 2020) and The Green Shore (Simon & Schuster, 2012), and her work has appeared in Tin House, VQR, The Iowa Review, The New York Times, Granta, Ploughshares, Kenyon Review, Mississippi Review, O. Henry Prize Stories, and other publications. She's an assistant professor of creative writing at Wayne State University and a faculty member of the summer program Writing Workshops in Greece.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Courtney on March 20, 2020

This book was my companion at the outbreak of COVID-19 and I could not have wished for a better friend. The grieving narrator is uprooted and lost, spending her time napping, drinking a little too much, and cleaning up her dead parents apartment all the while kindling a romance with a mysterious nei......more

Goodreads review by Cat on March 14, 2020

Wow wow wow wow wow This is going to be a bit more informal than an Edelweiss+ review, but I can't not review it everywhere. So this book drew me in with its hypnotic, kind of ever-flowing prose and kept me on the line with the characters' personal philosophies, which although vivid and certain had an......more


Quotes

"Hillary Huber and Malcolm Hillgartner deliver finely calibrated performances of this evocative novel about desire, loss, and identity.… Hillgartner, whose enticing voice is elegant and rough, offers a thoughtful performance of a man struggling with duty versus desire. Huber's Mira is a sympathetic mix of yearning, perplexity, and fortitude. Together they weave a beguiling tale." AudioFile Magazine

“Skillfully captures the characters’ sense of feeling stuck between stations. This riff on the adage that you can never go home poses essential questions on what it means to belong.” Publishers Weekly

“Richly told. . . . A remarkable recognition of how language can work, how grief and love and loss can be so particular, so meaningful, so universal—and how words can make those resonances propulsive and haunting.” BookPage, Starred Review