--Richard Ford
As we enter debut novelist Scott Blackwood's intimate world, Winnie Lipsy is sitting in her backyard in Austin, staring up into a tree. She's not bird-watching, but imploring her 8-year-old son to please come down before he falls and breaks his arm. Isaac falls, breaks his arm. That's about the only thing predictable about the Texas writer's revelatory debut novel, which builds on the solid foundation of Blackwood's 2001 story collection "In the Shadow of Our House." What's most amazing about "We agreed to meet just here" — the title pops into the hit-and-run driver's mind when Natalie, smiling, "explodes in the Blazer's highbeams" — is Blackwood's trenchant and expedient use of ideas and language.
--Steve Bennett, San Antonio Express-News [Named a best of 2009 book]
Scott Blackwood's new novel, We Agreed to Meet Just Here, manages somehow to be both spare and all-encompassing, a mystery that delves into the very nature of disappearance: Once gone, is anyone ever really gone? Blackwood proves himself a master of connection; he depicts with almost miraculous brevity (the book is only 164 pages long) how seemingly unrelated events, actions, even thoughts, dangle strings that eventually get caught up in one another and weave a community together. Sometimes the stitches are uneven, or a patch is left bare, but everything eventually ties together...Blackwood grew up in Texas and... until recently, he taught creative writing at the University of Texas. He has decamped to Roosevelt University in Chicago, where he is director of the MFA Creative Writing Program. Pity us, but great news for them – they just latched onto a major talent.
--Joy Tripping, The Dallas Morning News

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