Friendly Fire: A Fractured Memoir
Additional information
Author | Paul Rousseau |
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Genre | Nonfiction – Memoir |
Release Date | September 10, 2024 |
Publisher | Harper Horizon, HarperCollins |
Description
One month before his college graduation, Paul Rousseau is accidentally shot in the head by his roommate and best friend.
At some point in the course of Paul and Mark’s friendship, Mark acquired—legally and with required permits—five firearms. Those weapons lived with them in their college apartment. It was a non-issue for the two best friends. They were inseparable. They were twenty-two-year-old boys at the height of their college experience, unaware that everything was about to change forever.
The bullet ripped through two walls before it struck Paul’s skull. Mark had accidentally pulled the trigger while in the other room and—frightened for his own future—delayed getting treatment for Paul, who miraculously remained conscious the entire time. In vivid detail, Friendly Fire brings us into the world of both the shooting itself and its surgical counterpoint—the dark spaces of survival in the face of a traumatic brain injury and into the paranoid, isolating, dehumanizing maw of personal injury cases.
Friendly Fire is the story of a friendship—both its formation and its destruction. Through phenomenal writing and gripping detail, Paul reveals a compelling and inspirational story that speaks to much of contemporary American life.
About the Author
P
aul Rousseau is a disabled writer represented by Darhansoff & Verrill literary agency. His debut FRIENDLY FIRE: A FRACTURED MEMOIR is forthcoming from HarperCollins September 10th, 2024. Paul’s work has also appeared in Catapult, Necessary Fiction, Waxwing, New Delta Review, Pidgeonholes, CRAFT, Jellyfish Review, Pithead Chapel, and Wigleaf, among others, and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net, Best American Science Fiction & Fantasy, Best Small Fictions 2024, and longlisted on the Wigleaf Top 50.
Paul’s essay “Public Safety” was hand-selected by Roxane Gay to feature in her newsletter, The Audacity early in 2021. This piece can be found, in somewhat altered form, in Paul’s recently completed memoir, FRIENDLY FIRE, in which the author is accidentally shot in the head by his best friend and roommate one month before college graduation, and finds himself navigating the trauma of brain injury, the dehumanization of personal injury cases, and the pieces of a devastated friendship.
You can follow him on Twitter @Paulwrites7
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