Shelf Awareness Review for Comet

Thanks to Natalie Papailiou for her glowing review of The Night of the Comet in today’s Shelf Awareness for Readers. The Night of the Comet by George Bishop George Bishop’s sophomore novel, The Night of the Comet, takes readers back to the first exciting awakening of adolescence: the painful insecurities, the overpowering flush of first … Read more

Advocate Editorial

Nice surprise this morning to find my new novel mentioned by the editors of the Baton Rouge/New Orleans Advocate newspaper. Thanks, Advocate.

Our Views: Louisiana’s night skies

Just in time for the summer reading season, New Orleans novelist George Bishop’s new book, “The Night of the Comet,” offers a nice reminder of what it was like to look at the night sky before light pollution made star-gazing so difficult in many cities.

Bishop’s novel, set in the fictional Louisiana town of Terrebonne in 1973, uses the arrival of the Comet Kohoutek as the backdrop for a family story that’s about many things, including the connection between fathers and sons.

At its heart is 14-year-old Alan Broussard Jr., who gets a telescope for his birthday. The novel opens in Baton Rouge in 2000, as Alan does some stargazing near Perkins Road and thinks back to his times with his father.

Light pollution from street lamps and homes makes the night sky more difficult to see.

We hope that the night sky becomes more visible in communities across south Louisiana.

In the meantime, Bishop’s novel is a testament to what we’re missing.

*30*

Copyright © 2011, Capital City Press LLC • 7290 Bluebonnet Blvd., Baton Rouge, LA 70810 • All Rights Reserved

Wilmington Star Interview

I got to speak with with the ever gracious Ben Steelman of the Wilmington Star News last week about The Night of the Comet. Here’s what we talked about.

Star News

 

 

 

Bookmarks – Celestial Focus, but Heart on Ground

By Ben Steelman
Published: Saturday, July 27, 2013 at 12:30 a.m.
Last Modified: Friday, July 26, 2013 at 1:39 p.m.

George Bishop wasn’t all that much into the space program when he was a boy. “Oh, I built models of the Apollo capsule,” he recalled in a phone interview from his home in New Orleans.

Still, Bishop remembers peeking through a telescope in middle school, in his tiny Louisiana hometown, scanning the skies for Comet Kohoutek back in 1973.

“It was all in the pop culture at the time – it was hard to miss,” Bishop said. “It was kind of the last gasp of the space race.”

Bishop would go on to a career teaching English in a string of exotic countries, from Indonesia to Azerbaijan. In 2000, he earned a master’s degree in creative writing from the University of North Carolina Wilmington.

Now, 40 years after the comet’s sighting, he’s made Kohoutek a character in his second novel, “Night of the Comet,” to be released Tuesday by Ballantine Books.

“It’s not really a book about astronomy,” he said. “It’s more about relationships, about fathers and sons and husbands and wives.”

Bishop said he didn’t set out to write a Kohoutek book. Instead, he started out with two images he couldn’t get out of his head: A broken telescope, sitting in a corner, and a man in a raincoat, jumping off a roof.

“I wanted to fit those things together,” he said.

Writing this novel was harder than his first, he said, because he wanted to exceed his first effort, “Letter to My Daughter,” which debuted in 2010 to mixed reviews but strong sales.

“I felt like my whole career was hanging on every word I wrote,” he added.

“Night of the Comet” ended up taking a year longer to finish than he’d hoped.

Bishop said he’s having less trouble with his next novel, which is also set in Louisiana and falls during the U.S. Bicentennial of 1976.

Now writing full-time, Bishop isn’t teaching regularly, although he did spend a month in Turkey last year under the auspices of the U.S. State Department.

And he fully credits UNCW for much of his success.

“I had been writing for years, scraps of stories from years overseas,” he said. “But no one was reading them. When I got to Wilmington, for the first time, I was finally in a community of readers and writers, getting feedback and a sharp critical eye. It was like heaven.”

Bishop will be returning to Wilmington in the fall, for a reading at Pomegranate Books.

Summer Reading Pick in South Carolina

This just in: THE NIGHT OF THE COMET is on a Southern Titles Summer Reading list in The State newspaper, out of Columbia, South Carolina:

“‘The Night of the Comet’ by George Bishop: Obsessed with the coming of Comet Kohoutek, a frustrated high school science teacher tries to bond with his 14-year-old son, Alan Jr., by giving him a telescope. But instead of pointing it at the stars, Alan Jr. focuses the instrument on the bedroom window of his neighbor and classmate, Gabriella. The closer the comet draws, the more relationships fracture. Aug. 6. Random House. $29.95.”

And here’s a picture of the the South Carolina flag, which I always liked:

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