"
A Wolf by the Ears is a splendid novel filled with well-honed characters who offer a new dimension about American slavery and what it did to us. Karlin's picture of wartime is vivid, haunting, and unforgettable, showing us war in language that makes him seem not just a storyteller but a witness. This novel is inspired, a gift, and a pure treasure."--Edward P. Jones, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for
The Known World "A Wolf by the Ears chronicles the ordeals of two slaves among thousands in Maryland and Virginia who joined the British side in the forgotten War of 1812 against the American 'republic' and its hypocrisies, all for the cause of freedom promised by their monarchist allies and denied by a democracy built on slavery. Karlin makes this profoundly ironic and contradictory history so human and intimate, so tragic and yet redemptive, testimony to his great skill as a storyteller and his experience with the realities of war."--Mart?n Espada, author of Vivas to Those Who Have Failed: Poems
"Here is a complexly imagined record of the catastrophes and dreaming out of which the nation emerges. A dissection of the country within 'The Country, ' the then within the now. But what makes this work pulse with vitality is Karlin's attention to that which is fleeting--the smallest instant, the slightest flesh. Lush, elemental, seeping with place, this novel is a reckoning, a confrontation, an excavation of a history made of breath and touch."--Aracelis Girmay, author of The Black Maria
"Wayne Karlin's love of justice and the calling of his just art celebrate the ways struggle triumphs in the face of despair. He refracts the past against the present and makes us examine how we live now and ask why the moral dilemma of this time seems so reminiscent of that past. In A Wolf by the Ears Karlin writes at the height of his imaginative powers."--Fred D'Aguiar, author of Children of Paradise
"This is a novel of tremendous emotional complexity, of cruelty 'grown from the need to see oneself as kind.' The language is lush, and the wound deep and abiding."--Noy Holland, Juniper Prize for Fiction judge and author of I Was Trying to Describe What It Feels Like
"This is a novel that vividly examines the struggle of enslaved people to find their freedom, dignity and self-worth as our country struggled--as it still does--to define those values in the face of a reality created dependent on chattel slavery and continued with a legacy of institutionalized racism."--Michael Glaser, former poet laureate of Maryland
"A compelling, well-crafted tale . . . Karlin shows that he also can evocatively and effectively write about a long-ago war and the institution of slavery. He draws a brilliant and forceful picture."--The VVA Veteran