The Prize - Couverture souple

Morgan, Greg

 
9798995007227: The Prize

Synopsis

A Pulitzer Prize–winning photograph. Four lives it refused to let go.

On an April morning in Columbus, Ohio, a bomb tears through Foster Begg Preparatory School, killing 168 people — most of them children. In the chaos, a photographer captures a single image: a firefighter cradling a dead boy in one arm and reaching for a screaming girl with the other. The photograph wins the Pulitzer Prize. It becomes the most reproduced image in America. And it destroys every person in it.

Same photograph. Four different prisons.

Alex Kelly is thirteen, bandaged and haunted — the screaming girl the whole world recognizes but no one actually sees. She sleeps in her clothes with her shoes pointed at the door. She keeps a copy of the photograph sealed in a ziplock bag. She is trying to survive a mother who drinks, a best friend buried in the rubble, and the suffocating weight of being someone else's symbol.

Ronny Martinez is the firefighter — the hero on every magazine cover, the face of American courage. What the photograph doesn't show is that he can't go back inside a burning building, that his marriage is fracturing under the weight of a heroism he doesn't believe he earned, and that the girl he saved haunts him more than the boy he couldn't.

Jordan Lowe is the dead boy's mother. Her grief has hardened into something architectural — load-bearing walls of blame and ritual that keep her upright but sealed off from the world. When the firefighter from the photograph begins showing up at her door, she learns that anger and need can occupy the same room — and that the most dangerous thing a grieving woman can do is let someone in.

Demian Ochoa is the photographer — a Mexican-American kid from Columbus's west side who took the picture that changed everything and fled to Afghanistan to shoot a war that felt simpler than what he left behind. When he comes back, he finds the girl from his photograph waiting for him, and what begins as guilt becomes the most important mentorship of both their lives.

Told across four points of view over two years, The Prize follows these lives as they circle the same photograph — colliding, repelling, pulling each other toward something none of them can name. It is a novel about what happens after the cameras leave. About the private wreckage that outlasts the public mourning. About how a single frozen image can become a prison for the people trapped inside it — and what it costs to break free.

The Prize is literary fiction that reads like life: unhurried, devastating, and deeply human.

For readers of Dennis Lehane (Mystic River), Jess Walter (Beautiful Ruins), Elizabeth Strout (Olive Kitteridge), Tom Perrotta (The Leftovers), Ann Patchett (Commonwealth), and Chris Whitaker (We Begin at the End).

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