Andrei Guruianu

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  • Home
  • About
  • Cultural Criticism
  • Memoir
  • Fiction
  • Poetry
  • Events
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What interests me is the transformation, not the monument. I don’t construct ruins, but I feel ruins are moments when things show themselves. A ruin is not a catastrophe. It is the moment when things can start again.
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- 
Anselm Kiefer ​
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OUR SILENCES
(PARLOR Press, forthcoming 2022)

Our Silences is the first of three thematically-linked novels that grapple with those things in our lives that go unseen and unheard, the things we carry with us that remain buried within—consciously or otherwise—and for which the words often fail us, for which few are prepared to listen. The book blends fiction and autobiography to explore the lost relationship between a mother and son who discovers that before she died while giving birth to him she had endured several abortions and miscarriages that she had never revealed to anyone, and which his father had also kept from him his entire life. His search for answers to a lifetime endured in silence unfolds through a series of encounters that oscillate between a Cioran-like darkness and Marquez’s fantastical ruminations. In the end it becomes an obsession, a compulsion to keep looking for that which all of long for: the comforts of intimacy and the solace of knowing that it is not entirely out of our reach.

The Darkest CiTY
(Fomite Press, 2017)

The Darkest City is a dialogue conducted in text and images between Romanian-born writer Andrei Guruianu and American photographer and visual artist Teknari. The Darkest City draws its inspiration from Teknari’s black and white photographs of the Southern Tier of New York, whose small cities and villages have at times been labeled by some as “drive through” kind of places. Once known for being the birthplace of IBM, the Endicott Johnson shoe factories that furnished boots for American soldiers in WWII, Guglielmo Marconi’s first radio tower, as well as the Twilight one series, large parts of the area now lie in disrepair, abandoned, a modern ruinscape. The claw marks are visible on the empty factories, boarded up storefronts, the houses and churches that have seen the rise and fall of industry. Despite the inevitable change and fresh coat of paint that comes with time, the image remains often dark and bleak, one that unfortunately is all too familiar when one conjures up visions of small town America.
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As The Darkest City is rooted in the ancient practice of ekphrastic exchange and artistic dialogue, we invite readers along the way to contribute their thoughts and reflections and insert themselves into this narrative be it on art and aesthetics, on memory and loss, or on identity and a sense of purpose and belonging. In the following pages we ask you to consider along with us: What do our modern lives suspended between the metaphorical here and then look like, and how do we go about living them to their fullest? 
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Body of Work
(Fomite Press, 2013)

Throughout thirteen stories, Body of Work chronicles the physical and emotional toll of characters consumed by the all-too-human need for a connection. Their world is achingly common - beauty and regret, obsession and self-doubt, the seductive charm of loneliness. Often fragmented, whimsical, always on the verge of melancholy, the collection is a sepia-toned portrait of nostalgia - each story like an artifact of our impermanence, an embrace of all that we have lost, of all that we might lose and love again someday.

Andrei Guruianu is a connoisseur of abandoned places, faded dreams, but also of surviving hope. The stories in Body of Work are at once street smart, graceful, and touching, capturing life’s surfaces in vivid detail, while simultaneously exploring emotional depths in language at once lyrical and wise. This collection introduces a rising star.
–  Bruce Henricksen, author of Crooked Miles, Woven World

Guruianu mesmerizes with the slow burn of his evocative prose in these compelling stories. He probes the mysteries of ‘small things set in motion’ with stunning precision and a remarkable degree of tenderness. ‘Body of Work,’ is a brilliant collection that explores humanity in all its facets of darkness and light. Superb!
–  Meg Tuite, author of Bound By Blue
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© Andrei Guruianu 2022

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