Lamar Herrin is the author of House of the Deaf and of five previous novels. His short stories have appeared in The New Yorker, Paris Review, and Epoch. Herrin is also the recipient of a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and was a professor of creative writing and contemporary literature at Cornell University.



HOUSE OF THE DEAF
Unbridled Books, October 2005
Genre: General Fiction
Agent: Dan Mandel

Haunting and beautiful, House of the Deaf is the story of one man’s brush with terrorism and his quest to find answers.

Ben Williamson has lost a daughter. While studying abroad in Madrid, Michelle Williamson was caught in a bombing by Basque separatists, a bombing that killed her and several members of the Guardia Civil at a post in a park. For Ben, this act of violence has left only questions, and at a moment of despair he decides to seek out the reasons for Michelle’s death. As Ben begins to learn about the endless tensions beneath the surface of Spanish culture, he finds that he wants someone to answer for his loss. Ben’s other daughter, Annie, is also wrestling with the loss of her sister. When she follows her father to Spain, she finds a changed man.

Also available by this author