Year
2023
Language
English

About

In 2005, after four months in hospitals, Dick Rayburn returns home with a limp, a disfigured face, and pain. Around tense conversations between him and his wife, Valerie, concerning their absent son, Jamie, the narrative weaves memories triggered by objects in the house. An old self-portrait draws him back to his childhood and the studio of his father, who trained Dick to be an artist, while an article critical of the Iraq War, by the journalist to whom he was engaged when they were graduate students, resurrects the person he was and the woman he loved. Dick relives his evolution from a young artist and left-wing university student to the war profiteer Valerie blames for Jamie being in Iraq, and cannot stop reliving the horror that he witnessed the day he flew into Fallujah and was shot down as his helicopter left the city. To cope with the memories that haunt him, Dick returns to his passion for painting. He paints what he saw in Fallujah, the person he feels he has become, and the loved ones he has lost. The images emerge from a deep, dark background, the principal ingredient of which is ivory black.

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Reviews

"Brian Duren is a writer of enviable talent, and Ivory Black is a novel of profound elegance. At once a love story, a novel of political intrigue, and a reflection on the way art and memory often collide, it's a book with something for everyone. What's more, the moral weight of this novel will leave you pondering its characters for months after reading. This is just the beginning from Duren, who s
Peter Geye, author of THE SKI JUMPERS
"In Ivory Black, Brian Duren takes us back to the last century-from hippie days to the Iraq war-and does it so powerfully and energetically that we can see it all in vivid color. This is a novel of enduring beauty and sorrow told by a master of the trade."
Mary Logue, author of THE STREEL and THE BIG SUGAR

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