Algonquin Books
Don't Stop Snowing by Gabriel Bump (Hardcover) (PREORDER)
Don't Stop Snowing by Gabriel Bump (Hardcover) (PREORDER)
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Fiction - Friendship - City Life
RELEASE DATE: 11/10/2026 (WILL SHIP DIRECTLY FROM OUR SUPPLIER'S WAREHOUSE)
How do you outrun the family curse? What if you can't?
Fresh out of grad school in Michigan, on the brink of despair, directionless, David worries his parents. They don't know what to do for him, they don't know how to heal him. His doctor suggests that he needs to gain some perspective, get to know himself. And possibly a relocation would help. Maybe there is such a thing as a geographical cure?
And so he takes off for snowy, grey Buffalo. It's not the first place that comes to mind when you think of a curative place, but there, he'll stay with his cousin Flip. Maybe time with Flip will give him some distance from his parents who hardly speak to each other. Maybe it will help him to forget his own troubled past. But as it turns out, Flip's life and state of mind is even unsteadier than his own. Suddenly enlisted to take care of his cousin and to even fill in for him at his job, David falls into a new life and a new way of seeing the world. A world where, come to think of it, he doesn't mind the snow.
Don't Stop Snowing is a fresh and honest--and funny--story of the struggles we all face as we realize that we don't just inherit eye, hair, and skin color, but also the complicated psyches of our parents.
AUTHOR BIO:
Gabriel Bump grew up in South Shore, Chicago. His debut novel, Everywhere You Don't Belong, was a New York Times Notable Book of 2020 and won the Ernest J. Gaines Award for Literary Excellence, the Great Lakes Colleges Association New Writers Award for Fiction, the Heartland Booksellers Award for Fiction, and the Black Caucus of the American Library Association's First Novelist Award. His second novel, The New Naturals, was a Washington Post, Boston Globe, and New York Times Notable Book of 2023. Bump's writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Best American Short Stories, and elsewhere. He teaches at the University of Massachusetts in the MFA Program for Poets and Writers.
