Detonator will be Out Sept 15, 2025!

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DETONATOR — OUT SEPTEMBER 2025

Sensorily rich and narratively captivating, the stories in "Detonator" are utterly addictive.  Author Peter Mountford invites readers with a balance of humor, sensuality, and compassion while spanning continents, offering intimate portraits of flawed characters caught in the crosshairs of personal and political upheavals.  

In “One More Night Behind Walls,” set against the early 1980s-onset of Sri Lanka’s civil war, the young protagonist observes, “Some say the grown-ups used the war as an excuse to let go, but I think it’s more like the war forced them together, and that’s what made them go off the rails.” Soon, the interpersonal dramas of the expat community beget casual debauchery and fatal consequences during a drunken New Year’s Party.  

In other stories, an American consultant faces personal and professional ruin after fateful decisions concerning Ecuador's post-revolution economy. A divorcee in her forties finds unexpected chemistry with her ex-husband’s girlfriend after a Scottish Highland funeral. A married suburban feminist experiments with the escape of a dangerous love affair in Washington, D.C.  

Publisher’s Weekly Review:

In this perceptive collection, Mountford unearths the inner struggles of characters caught in the middle of political and private battles. In “One More Night Between the Walls,” the child of diplomats in Sri Lanka witnesses the strain on his parent’s marriage over the course of a calamitous New Year’s Eve party, as the threat of civil war mounts.

“Mr. McNamara’s Suit” concerns the moral dilemma of a Vietnamese American laundry owner who discovers his best client is Robert McNamara, the former secretary of defense and architect of the Vietnam War. The standout “Pay Attention” follows a suburban woman’s experiments with sadomasochism to distract herself from outrage and fear over the election of Donald Trump, only to find hope in an unlikely romance with her affectionate torturer. In the title story, a dissolute man has a stroke while having sex with his mistress on Halloween, after which he faces his wife at the hospital.

Mountford is an expert at locating what makes his characters tick and how they handle crises, as with the title story’s married couple, struck “by old wounds... forever confused and looking in the wrong direction.” There’s plenty of heat in this wide-ranging volume.

With remarkable sensitivity and psychological acuity, Mountford positions his characters not at the center of historical events, but at their peripheries—witnesses to momentous changes they can only partially comprehend.  

“Our minds were frail, troubled by old wounds that kept calling for help, and we were forever confused and looking in the wrong direction,” says the character of the title story, “Detonator,” about a man who blows up his life, again. And again.   

Rather than rendering them insignificant, this perspective reveals their profound humanity as they navigate desire, grief, and meaning against political instability and social transformation. 

Mountford illuminates each character with stunning humanity—free from condescension—as consequences swirl through even the purest intentions. With striking precision, he captures the visceral authenticity of emotions as characters gather fragmented understandings of their place in the world. Each story traces a unique path along the plane curve of history, honoring the messy, beautiful complexity of lifetimes unspooled and most of all — lived.