Join us IN STORE to welcome Ken Kalfus discussing his book 2AM in Little America! This is an IN PERSON event with limited seating, please RSVP here
A novel that imagines a future in which sweeping civil conflict  has forced America’s young people to flee its borders, into an  unwelcoming world.
One such American is Ron Patterson, who  finds himself on distant shores, working as a repairman and sharing a  room with other refugees. In an unnamed city wedged between ocean and  lush mountainous forest, Ron can almost imagine a stable life for  himself. Especially when he makes the first friend he has had in years—a  mysterious migrant named Marlise, who bears a striking resemblance to a  onetime classmate.
Nearly a decade later—after anti-migrant  sentiment has put their whirlwind intimacy and asylum to an end—Ron is  living in “Little America,” an enclave of migrants in one of the few  countries still willing to accept them. Here, among reminders of his  past life, he again begins to feel that he may have found a home. Ron  adopts a stray dog, observes his neighbors, and lands a repairman job  that allows him to move through the city quietly. But this newfound  security, too, is quickly jeopardized, as resurgent political divisions  threaten the fabric of Little America. Tapped as an informant against  the rise of militant gangs and contending with the appearance of a  strangely familiar woman, Ron is suddenly on dangerous and uncertain  ground.
Brimming with mystery, suspense, and Kalfus’s distinctive comic irony, 2 A.M. in Little America  poses several questions vital to the current moment: What happens when  privilege is reversed? Who is watching and why? How do tribalized  politics disrupt our ability to distinguish what is true and what is  not? This is a story for our time—gripping, unsettling, prescient—by one  of our most acclaimed novelists.         
About the Author:
Ken Kalfus is the author of 2 A.M. in Little America. He is also the author of three other novels—Equilateral; A Disorder Peculiar to the Country, a finalist for the National Book Award; and The Commissariat of Enlightenment—and the story collections Thirst and Pu-239 and Other Russian Fantasies, the latter a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award and the basis for the HBO film Pu-239. He lives in Philadelphia.
About the Moderator:
Margaret Paxson is a writer, anthropologist, and performer and a research fellow at the Berkley Center. Her books include Solovyovo: The Story of Memory in a Russian Village (2005) and The Plateau (2019).

 
             
            