Today's special guest is Jonah Kruvant. A
writer, teacher and student of the world, Jonah received his BA from
Skidmore, his teaching degree from Fordham and an MFA from Goddard College.
Jonah lives in New York City.
ABOUT THE BOOK
In a futuristic
American society where all citizens have computerized chips in their brains and
insert needles into their veins to enter a virtual reality, Victor Vale leads a
fairly typical life. He is an officer of
the law with greater ambitions, a family man, and a dutiful citizen of the
Nation. Yet when The Chief assigns him a
case to go undercover and expose a community of illegal “creators,” Victor
finds himself strangely compelled to creative writing. For the first time, he starts to question the
world around him, and becomes involved in a web of lies, uncertain of whom to
trust, and unable to distinguish between virtualism and reality. As he searches for answers, Victor slowly
begins to unravel hidden truths about the world, and even uncovers an
astonishing secret from his own past.
In order to
prove to the “creators” that he is genuine, Victor writes a manuscript, at
great risk to his wife and son. When
books are banned and ultimately destroyed, Victor realizes that his book alone
has survived. Only then does the reader
come to a startling realization in a unique narrative twist.
AN EXCERPT
Not long after the Cleansing Act, I
was promoted to Detective. I was thirty-four. I had a wife and child to
support. A career to pursue. My son wanted things, my wife wanted things; hell,
I wanted things. I had worked on the force for thirteen years and it was time I
got my detective badge.
That was all I could see back then.
I didn’t care about creators.
Then I was assigned to the case. But
even before I stepped into the Chief’s office, events began taking shape that
marked both the beginning and the end of a new chapter in my life. It was on my
way to the police station, wading through the unbearable stench of the dirty
human flesh of the Slums, that I began to question things, what I thought I
knew about the world … and about myself.
So this is where I start my story.
This is where I begin my book.
That day, for whatever reason, I
felt conscious of my surroundings. The beggars were pushing each other out of
the way to get under awnings and balconies of restaurants and apartments as it
started to rain. The restaurants were filled with shattered glass, moldy
kitchens. The strongest beggars lived in cramped apartments with cockroaches
and termites. The ones that couldn’t find shelter that morning just lay there,
shivering from the cold. Some would let raindrops fall from the sky into their
open mouths. Two naïve children were chasing each other around bodies and giggling, cleaning dirt out of each
other’s hair. The bright lights of the skyscrapers, the swiftness of the
skytrain, the convenience of the airpath—all a beggar had to do was look up and
he would find himself in a fantastical world of dreams.
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