PRO CONNECT
Born and raised in New Jersey, David majored in Psychology at Dickinson College and holds an MA and Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from New York University. After receiving his doctorate David did a post-doctorate at the University of Minnesota for three years before pursuing a largely entrepreneurial career in technology. Married with three grown sons, David and his wife Gabrielle travel regularly between Minneapolis, Steamboat Springs CO and Palm Springs CA. Retired now from his career in technology, David writes daily while partnering with his youngest son on a business devoted to tea and Asian tea culture.
David is an avid guitar player / singer, a middling speaker of Italian and an enthusiastic tennis player. He and Gabrielle lived in Italy for six months in 2022, where he researched The Twitter Gospels, took language classes, and searched for the perfect bucatini amatriciana. The Twitter Gospels is David's first novel; his second novel is well underway.
“With a deft hand, Parish weaves into this religious thriller facts of historical relevance, sumptuous descriptions of regional foods (and the ritualistic attitudes that go along with them), and an admiring attentiveness in the depictions of his women characters.”
– Kirkus Reviews
A growing Twitter account provokes a papal inquiry in Parish’s novel.
Religion can engender feelings of anxiety about the constraints of church doctrine as followers mature into their understandings about life and the world. For Paolo Venticinque, an Italian seminarian working as a Jesuit high school teacher, those constraints don’t cause him to question his faith but to wonder how his faith can work beyond them. When Venticinque is sent to Jerusalem to interview men at a mental health institution, he is on a mission of “brand management,” as his superior, Bishop Giuseppe Malatesta, puts it. A Twitter account that has racked up 2.5 million followers and counting is being run by an unknown poster claiming to be the returned Jesus Christ. The men Paolo interviews have been “afflicted with a psychosis called The Jerusalem Syndrome,” so they’re all considered suspects who might be responsible for the account. While Malatesta deems the tweets a threat to the Catholic Church, Paolo questions the bishop’s assessment, because the posts are preaching compassion and unity. After speaking to the men and sharing his thoughts about his findings with his neighbor, Shirin, his mother, Leonella, and an inspector by the name of Viterbo, things don’t seem to add up. With a deft hand, Parish weaves into this religious thriller facts of historical relevance, sumptuous descriptions of regional foods (and the ritualistic attitudes that go along with them), and an admiring attentiveness in the depictions of his women characters. In the latter part of the book, however, the pacing falls into a less exciting rhythm as the narrative somewhat neatly wraps up loose ends rather than continuing to carry on the heightened sense of intrigue that significantly bolstered the earlier sections. Still, Parish has crafted a prescient and thoughtfully weighty story that reflects on religion’s effect on relationships and communities.
Compassion anchors a young theologian in this thoughtful tale.
Pub Date: April 9, 2024
ISBN: 9798891321939
Page count: 364pp
Publisher: Atmosphere Press
Review Posted Online: Feb. 7, 2024
Day job
Writer
Favorite author
TC Boyle
Favorite book
Water Music
Favorite line from a book
Everybody funny. Now you funny too.
Favorite word
Ecclesiastic
Hometown
Jersey City, NJ
Passion in life
Family, Friends, Food, Music, Literature, Learning, All Things Italian
Unexpected skill or talent
Loves to Make Fresh Pasta
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