Greg Jackson‘s work has appeared in The New Yorker, the Virginia Quarterly Review, and Granta. Prodigals (Picador) is his first book. During a violent storm, a filmmaker escapes New York, accompanied by a woman who may be his therapist. A lawyer in the throes of divorce seeks refuge at her seaside cottage only to find a vagrant girl living in it. A dilettantish banker sees his ambitions laid bare when he comes under the influence of two strange sisters. A group of friends gathers in the California desert for one last bacchanal, and a journalist finds his visit to the French country home of a former tennis star take a deeply unnerving turn. Strivers, misfits, and children of privilege, the restless, sympathetic characters in Jackson’s short story collection, Prodigals, hew to passion and perversity through life’s tempests. Theirs is a quest for meaning and authenticity in lives spoiled by self-knowledge and haunted by spiritual longing. Lyrical and unflinching, cerebral and surreal, this collection maps the degradations of contemporary life with insight and grace. Antonio Ruiz-Camacho in The New York Times Book Review praised it as “[A] fervent debut […] with a language both hallucinatory and philosophical. [Prodigals] is a profound allegory of our addiction to success.”
January 14, 2025
Greg Jackson
by
Greg Jackson‘s work has appeared in The New Yorker, the Virginia Quarterly Review, and Granta. Prodigals (Picador) is his first book. During a violent