In April of 1997 Tristan Broder makes a pilgrimage of sorts from San Francisco to the prickly desert and scalped mountains around Tucson Arizona the place where he helped bury his partner Joe five years before. Guided by a comet that crossed the spring sky that year he wanders toward renewal and resurrection memory and mystery deadly secrets and dark intentions.. There are plenty of people in the desert who still love Tristan as much as they did Joe. There’s Maria Joe’s wild sister now a converted Pentecostal; her truck-driving husband Earl; Joe’s mother with the dog Murphy she found one day abandoned in the desert; and Joe’s best friend Mik a tough-minded Punjabi Muslim whose one vanity is his long silken hair. With open and glad hearts they join Tristan to help him make a memorial to the whole-souled man he loved. Yet despite the fact that they are all bound like Tristan by the memory and love for the saint who once lived among them every one of them is hiding something.. Originally published in 2000 this new edition includes a foreword by Miriam Wolf and a new introduction by the author.. “Brian Bouldrey’s Love the Magician is operatic in its passions as well as in its themes of love mortality and the struggle to sustain faith. And yet the author never loses sight of his novel’s human dimensions giving us fresh and memorable characters. This book is to quote the protagonist Tristan Broder an awesomely dark story about a prolonged mistake.’ It is also a book that sheds a bright uncompromising light on one man’s reckoning with fate.” – Bernard Cooper. “Tristan Broder the protagonist and bereaved lover in Brian Bouldrey’s fine novel Love the Magician takes the reader on a curiously unsettling pilgrimage into harsh terrain. Set in the Sonoran Desert during the Yacqui Deer Dance Easter celebration Tristan’s journey to the center of family affection grief religion and redemption reveals his own prickly relationship toward being a survivor of the ‘Plague of the Morally Lazy.’ This is a timely and moving story.” – Antonya Nelson. “Brian Bouldrey’s writing is so smart and so risky and consistently carries that precarious curious balance between humor and heartbreak. I’m never certain whether to bust out laughing or burst into tears. Love the Magician is filled with examples of what its narrator calls ‘the little node of miracle that every human must have.’ It’s a really really terrific novel.” – Scott Heim. “Love the Magician is a modern-day pilgrimage to the intersection of love and death faith and its loss the rituals of worship and the rituals of pleasure. By turns comic and unsettling lyrical and brutal it is a tour de force of storytelling – a passionate voice in search of miracles.” – Jean Thompson