Edith Pearlman may not be a household name yet, but there's no question that she should be. Her short-story collection, 鈥淏inocular Vision,鈥 is among the best I've ever read. In the Monitor's February review, we noted, 鈥淧earlman writes with a kind of serene precision that would astonish any writer. The stories' settings range from fictional Godolphin, Mass., to Jerusalem, Latin America, and tsarist Russia, but the note-perfect word choices and resolute compassion remain.鈥 In a foreword, novelist Ann Patchett predicted that 鈥淏inocular Vision鈥 would be the book that elevates Pearlman's stories alongside Alice Munro's and John Updike's. Happily, she was right.
