MOIRA CRONE

AUTHOR OF THE NOT YET


WHAT GETS INTO US: CELEBRATED STORIES SET IN A SMALL CAROLINA TOWN

"UTTERLY SUI GENERIS" (THE NEW YORK TIMES) LOUISIANA STORIES

Advance Praise for the new novel, THE NOT YET

"I HAVE NOT READ A MORE COMPELLING NOVEL IN A VERY LONG TIME...." Jim Grimsley

"A PROVOCATIVE CONTEMPLATION OF WHAT IT MEANS TO LIVE IN A WORLD OF HAVES AND HAVE NOTS..."Elise Blackwell

"A VIVID AND LAYERED IMAGINING OF WHAT'S TO BECOME OF NEW ORLEANS AND HUMANITY IN THE 22nd CENTURY..." Roy Blount Jr.


FORTHCOMING MARCH, 2012
It's 2121; the Heirs control society's resources from their lavish walled city-states. Through life extension, they live hundreds of years. Outside, the poor barely survive. Malcolm de Lazarus, twenty, is a "Not Yet," one counting on joining the elite. But when his fortune mysteriously disappears, he must sail to the chaotic New Orleans Islands for answers. On the way, he encounters the darkest side of Heirs' privilege, which threatens everything he knows and loves.




From her vast and tasty imagination, Moira Crone has fashioned a post-apocalyptic picaresque to rival Riddley Walker and Fiskadoro. In The Not Yet, her foundling Malcolm navigates a bizarre, fallen New Orleans as strange and wonderful as the real one.
—STEWART O'NAN, author of Last Night at the Lobster, Songs for the Missing, The Circus Fire, The Odds and Snow Angels


New Orleans has always been an island, and in Moira Crone’s new novel, The Not Yet, the island is literal and the city is flooded for eternity. New Orleans has always been a crossing of worlds visible and invisible, and in Crone’s lyrical prose the intersection includes the future and aliens and transformations beyond our dreams. New Orleans has always signified decadence and death for our gothic region of the South, and Crone’s story begins with a boatman ferrying something very much like a dead man into a place very much like the land of the dead. New Orleans has always created monsters, so why not Crone’s race of Heirs, superbeings who hold Creoles and Cajuns as pets. To classify this novel in any way would detract from its ability to resonate on many levels, as myth, as high literature, as science fiction, as fantasy, with the hints of a graphic novel in the rich imagery and finely honed writing. Malcolm’s odyssey, like a good gumbo, cannot be described but begs to be tasted. I have not read a more compelling novel in a very long time. —JIM GRIMSLEY, author of Dream Boy, My Drowning, and The Ordinary, among others.




A series of short stories set in a small North Carolina town, following the same characters from the staid fifties, through the upheaval of the sixties, to the social transformations of the present day.
The characters in these stories love and hate the dishevelment and chaos and delights of South Louisiana--they know they should leave, but they don't want to--