"This book is a love bomb, a love bloom, a love letter from a soul on the edge of death who talks back, cracks wise, and throws down wisdom. Daviau reminds us that death always kisses birth, living always births dying, crying keeps us whole, and laughter is good medicine. I swooned."
—Lidia Yuknavitch, author of Reading the Waves and The Chronology of Water
"Mo Daviau’s Epic and Lovely is a novel that manages the startling feat of being at once deeply intimate and thrillingly grand. Taking on motherhood, mortality, disability, and seemingly everything else under the California sun—tech billionaires and Vegas lounge singers, age gaps and abusers—Daviau’s heartbreaking novel fully earns its title’s fitting descriptors. Epic and Lovely is wonderful from end to end."
—Matthew Specktor, author of The Golden Hour and Always Crashing in the Same Car
"Full of tenderness, dark humor, and aching vulnerability, Mo Daviau has written a stunning novel that asks how we choose to be remembered when our stories reach their inevitable conclusion. Illuminating the complicated intersection of bodily autonomy and parental love, Epic and Lovely is a meditation on inheritance—both genetic and emotional—that deftly explores what it means to leave behind a legacy when time is running out."
—-Kimberly King Parsons, author of We Were the Universe
“Daviau is such a talented prose writer. Uproariously funny, singeing, authoritative. This is a skillful, sophisticated author writing with a scalpel on every line, willing to go to wild places. Somehow we’re in the territory of farce, of
Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine, and of
Eyes Wide Shut, all at the same time.”
—Courtney Sender, author of
In Other Lifetimes All I’ve Lost Comes Back to Me: Stories
“In
Epic and Lovely, Mo Daviau pushes against our expectations of the chronically ill. It’s a fully rendered look at chronic illness and difficult choices. Darkly funny and driven by the voice of Nina, whose voice is in turns sardonic, quirky, smart, and vulnerable,
Epic and Lovely challenges our ideas about what it means to be sick in the modern world.”
—Renée K. Nicholson, coeditor of
Bodies of Truth: Personal Narratives on Illness, Disability, and Medicine
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