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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
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English
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THE CONFUSION OF LANGUAGES

Siobhan Fallon

For fans of Notes on a Scandal and Janice Y.K. Lee’s The Expatriates comes THE CONFUSION OF LANGUAGES, a taut and intimate new novel from Siobhan Fallon about the secrets and lies of friendship, marriage, and motherhood, all set against the expat military community in the Middle East. Written with stunning prose and powerful emotional insight, THE CONFUSION OF LANGUAGES is a story of two unforgettable women and the choices each make in friendship, in marriage, and in love.
I'll just read a little bit, I tell myself. And really, why shouldn't I?

Both Cassie Hugo and Margaret Brickshaw dutifully followed their soldier husbands to the US Embassy in Amman, Jordan, but that’s about all the women have in common. After two years abroad, Cassie is a self-proclaimed expert on what she sees as the perils of life in the Middle East. But for newly arrived Margaret, the move is a chance to see the world and explore. Against the odds the two strike up a friendship, until their husbands deploy as the Arab Spring erupts and Cassie senses her new friend pulling away.

When a fender-bender supposedly sends Margaret to the local police station, Cassie remains alone in the Brickshaw apartment to watch over Margaret’s toddler son. But with Margaret missing for hours, Cassie becomes bored and soon frustrated, tired of being left behind while Margaret adventures. Then Cassie discovers her friend’s journal. Where could Margaret be? Could her diary reveal the secrets that have come between them?

Written with stunning prose and powerful emotional insight, THE CONFUSION OF LANGUAGES is a story of two unforgettable women and the choices each make in friendship, in marriage, and in love.

Siobhan Fallon is the author of You Know When the Men Are Gone. She earned her MFA at the New School in New York City, and her writing has appeared in Women’s Day, Good Housekeeping, New Letters, Publishers Weekly, NPR’s Morning Edition, The Huffington Post, and Military Spouse Magazine. She lived at Fort Hood while her husband was deployed to Iraq, and his recent military postings have taken their family to various regions of the Middle East. They are currently stationed in Abu Dhabi, the United Arab Emirates.
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Book

Published 2017-06-27 by Putnam

Book

Published 2017-06-27 by Putnam

Comments

Mesmerizing and devastating. I found myself ignoring everything but the countdown of Jordanian hours and the unraveling mystery central to Fallon's unforgettable novel, in which two military wives must explore a modern-day, cultural labyrinth. An insatiable read that will leave you breathless.

Compelling....A page-turning story.

Fallon is a novelist of transcendent compassion, a vibrant and poetic talent. In a tour de force of the human heart she lays bare the soul with such devastation and love we go where she leads us, breathless and grateful. Below our greatest personal ills may lie the seeds not only of international discord and grave alienation, but also intimacy, forgiveness and restoration. A miracle of ultimate choices,The Confusion of Languages shapes global consciousness and gives us what great novels give...the courage to face our deepest sorrows and the grace to overcome.

The story of two women caught up in the Arab spring, American outsiders in a crisis they try to grasp, neither sequestered nor free themselves. In their official quarters an intense domestic life goes on, fierce with competing desires and rife with dangerous misreadings and mistakes. A book both bitter and tender, with the unlike hearts of two driven young women beating in it.

The Confusion of Languages, Siobhan Fallon’s gorgeous new novel about two very different American women navigating life in the Middle East, is so gripping, poignant, and above all relevant, I couldn’t put it down. Fallon writes with authority and grace, and her characters are so compelling and complex; along with the sights, sounds, and smells of Jordan she so expertly conjures, the men and women of The Confusion of Languages stayed with me long after I closed the book.

"A gripping, cleverly plotted novel with surprising bite. Fallon carefully builds the cloistered world of two Army spouses living in the Middle East during the Arab Spring, a world whose edges and limitations we only start to glimpse as the two women spiral toward tragedy." – Phil Klay, National Book Award winner and New York Times bestselling author of Redeployment

Fallon’s storytelling approach is clever . . . .The Confusion of Languages explores friendships, parenting, and the civilian/military divide. That last issue makes the novel most relevant to readers. The more we can shrink the yawning chasm between families’ experiences, the better for us all.

An incisive examination of friendship and betrayal and a skillful mingling of cultural and domestic themes.

[T]hese women...are honest and well-formed characters, and Fallon strenuously avoids pat answers to the central question of how a woman should behave in a foreign land. Page-turning and rich in detail, this is a solid, insightful debut.

“A beautifully written novel about our struggle to find a common language even when we speak the same tongue. Once I started reading about these two very different women thrown together in the insular world of the U.S. Embassy in Jordan, I couldn’t stop. Evocative of the film Babel, The Confusion of Languages is layered, rich with meaning, and compelling right up to a final sentence so right and perfect that it resonates long after closing the book.” – Elizabeth Marro, author of Casualties

Fallon's novel has the irresistible force of a whirlpool: it sucks you in, pulling you ever closer to the mystery at the heart of the vortex. As the two narratives of friends Margaret and Cassie overlap and begin to merge, the pages turn faster and faster. The Confusion of Languages is intricately plotted, perfectly paced, and impossible to put down.

"Once I started reading this novel, I did not want to put it down. The Confusion of Languages is both a page-turning mystery and a riveting character study in the vein of Henry James or Patricia Highsmith. Tense, intriguing, smart, witty, set in an exotic locale, and full of barbed insights into the nature of friendship and marriage, Siobhan Fallon's newest novel is as entertaining as it is insightful. Book clubs will find endless fodder for debate and speculation. The moment I finished, I wanted to run to my friends and talk about this book all night." —Andria Williams, author of The Longest Night

"I love Siobhan Fallon’s writing about military families. It’s a world that may be unfamiliar to civilians, but Fallon delivers it brilliantly, charting its strict hierarchies, emotional complexities and fierce loyalties. Her new novel, A Confusion of Languages, chronicles a collision between two couples deployed in Jordan, raising questions of cultural sensitivity, social obligations, and military responsibilities, as well as the fundamental ones about the bonds of marriage. Fallon has a strong, lucid voice, and she explores these marital/military partnerships with the intelligence and deep compassion they deserve.” —Roxana Robinson, author of Sparta

Exquisite.

Touching. . . . A moving work about desire and the dislocation one might experience in a foreign land.

With a studied look at the thin line outsiders must walk, whether in someone else's country or someone else's living room, Fallon digs into the complications of friendship....Cerebral but still taut with suspense as Cassie unravels her friend's fate, this novel's sophisticated pacing and emotional core set it apart from the pack.

"As she did in her wonderful first collection You Know When the Men Are Gone, Siobhan Fallon has given us a moving, heartbreaking, and utterly believable account – not of the great events of our times, but of the great human dramas acted out in private on the periphery of those events. You can read The Confusion of Languages as a portrait of intimate and interlocking relationships in a remote diplomatic outpost, or as a parable for America’s adventures in the Middle East. Either way, Fallon’s ability to see into the living rooms, kitchens, and bars of Americans buffeted by their country’s wars makes her one of the most important observers of the American present." – Matti Friedman, author of Pumpkinflowers: A Soldier’s Story

[E]xcellent...dramatize[s] deeply-seated concerns connected to the downward spiral of America's frazzled empire....[D]awning on the reader with the force of epiphany is the realization that Americans are having a lot of trouble dealing with problems that being American ha[s] brought on.

"The Confusion of Languages peels back layer after layer of friendship, motherhood, and the confusions of love and marriage. Siobhan Fallon deftly illuminates the lives of two very different military spouses whose husbands are attached to the US Embassy in Jordan. After the men deploy, cultural differences, naive assumptions, and language issues crash into each other with disastrous effect. Margaret, new to Jordan, cannot recognize that her own hubris and what she believes to be kindness have the power to destroy lives. This gripping personal tale of a friendship gone wrong brings our larger political blunders, blindness, and naiveté in the Middle East to light." —Laura Harrington, bestselling author of Alice Bliss

This gripping novel tells a tale about jealousy, friendship, and secrets among U.S. expats during the beginnings of the Arab Spring.