Praise for

The Brightest Place in the World

The Brightest Place in the World portrays how tragedy and grief upend us and turn us reckless.  Mullins writes with grace, and with tenderness for his characters.  Through his storytelling, a nuanced and intimate Las Vegas—a town full of both heartache and love—comes alive.

—Edan Lepucki, New York Times bestselling author of California

 

In The Brightest Place in the World, David Philip Mullins deftly incorporates a ferocious chemical-plant explosion outside Las Vegas into a narrative about the shocks and emotional resonance of loss, exploring how four expertly delineated characters try to reconstruct their lives in the aftermath.  It’s a book as intriguing as it is artfully made.

—Ron Hansen, author of Mariette in Ecstasy

 

My life stopped for two days while I read this novel.  The Brightest Place in the World accomplishes what only our best art attempts.  In these pages, David Philip Mullins tracks the vagaries and desires of people we recognize as they deal with the unthinkable: illicit sex, crazy scams, betrayals, loneliness.  This book is a love letter to Las Vegas, the western desert, and, most of all, the mysteries of the human heart.

—Charles Bock, New York Times bestselling author of Beautiful Children

 

Every few years a writer comes along to tell us a new story about a place we thought we knew.  David Philip Mullins is that writer.  Las Vegas is his world.  Gone are the glitter and the glamour; revealed are the jarring effects of an industrial disaster in a massive, ever-changing city.  Through four compelling characters, Mullins examines the universal themes of family, loss, sex, and the yearning to communicate.  Carefully written in beautiful prose, The Brightest Place in the World is a moving and stunning novel from a natural writer.

—Chris Offutt, author of Country Dark

 

A traumatic explosion reverberates beyond the physical in this remarkable debut novel from David Philip Mullins.  Four intertwined characters navigate the aftershocks as each comes to terms with guilt, regret, and the consequences of choices hastily made.  Las Vegas itself emerges as a character in this finely wrought and keenly observed story, which shines a brilliant light on the fragile ties that bind us.

—Allison Amend, author of A Nearly Perfect Copy

 

Mullins’s sentences shimmer and shine, dazzling the reader like the lights of the Las Vegas Strip.  But there’s so much beyond the beauty of the writing.  As these characters navigate the horrific aftermath of a tragedy, we witness the full spectrum of human strengths and failings.  The Brightest Place in the World is an extraordinary novel, full of turns and revelations, of humanity and compassion.

—Ian Stansel, author of The Last Cowboys of San Geronimo

image.png