Advance Praise for A Girl Goes Into the Forest In these wistful, expansive stories, Peg Alford Pursell holds up a mirror to our lives and relationships. The stories excavate the lives of her narrators with honesty and clear, luminous prose. They are mysterious in the way the best fiction is-their truths echoing long after you turn the page. -Karen E. Bender, National Book Award finalist and author of Refund The stories in A GIRL GOES INTO THE FOREST are as beautiful and fine as a string of pearls and as complex as a thousand-piece puzzle. Each one is like a doorway through which we glimpse an entire universe. --Ramona Ausubel, author of Awayland and Sons and Daughters of Ease and Plenty A GIRL GOES INTO THE FOREST is nominally a collection of stories, but in its thrilling and original presentation, the book defies categorization. Pursell is a writer of precise and gorgeously riveting images, and her sentences shimmer with the spaciousness and lyricism of poetry. Reading these tales is to be drawn into worlds that feel at once recognizable and mythic. The effect is transporting. -Marisa Silver, author of Little Nothing and Mary Coin In seventy-eight viscerally powerful stories, Pursell masterfully reinvents the contemporary terrors and wonders that have faced the runaways and the revenants in our oldest tales. Passage by amazing passage, these interrelated stories capture the desiring and sorrowing and believing that can become threatening and then harmless and, at last, fatal. A spellbinding world. -Kevin McIlvoy, author of The Complete History of New Mexico and Other Stories The ordinary lives of parents, daughters, husbands, wives, illness and grief are transformed in Pursell's second collection, A GIRL GOES INTO THE FOREST. Here, the lucky reader enters a 'forest' brimming with enchantments, daily life turned transcendent and strange, but no less moving. Assembled like a luminous mosaic of stained glass, these seventy-eight tales read like prose poems-a pitch-perfect condensation of moments, inflected by Pursell's uncanny ear for the lyric. A wonder of a book! -Karen Brennan, author of Monsters A GIRL GOES INTO THE FOREST runs like a collection of melted fairy tales in which archetypes of gender and culture are warped and subverted in the crucible of Pursell's formidable intellect. These are stories of a variety that Joy Williams would recognize, tales broken all to pieces and hidden away in a weird apothecary. Pull open a drawer. See what hides within. -Christian Kiefer, author of Phantoms