Review: The Power of Religious Legend (The Utah Review)

In this lengthy review Les Roka references “American Trinity,” Pace’s first published short story and narrative precursor to Dream House on Golan Drive. “The sense of this unique, strange place of Utah and Mormonism is elucidated with conviction and accuracy….Dream House on Golan Drive is an important novel that deserves …

Salt Lake Tribune: Utah writer tells a contemporary Mormon coming-of-age story through an immortal narrator.

by Ellen Fagg Weist “If David Pace’s novel about a young man reared in a large, devoted Utah family rings with authenticity, that’s because its themes have autobiographical resonance for its author. “Pace, the literary editor of the Utah arts magazine 15 Bytes, will launch his first novel, “Dream House …

REVIEW: Association for Mormon Letters

“[R]ife with the universal struggles between good and evil, sin and righteousness, culture and truth, strength and weakness, and [the] dissonance between what we gain through experiential learning and rote imprinting. Thought provoking, and at times humorous and heart wrenching, Dream House on Golan Drive is a multi-layered and artfully …

David Pace, Postum and the Three Nephites

The following recently appeared in 15 Bytes: When he’s not busy raising money for Repertory Dance Theatre or editing 15 Bytes’ literary content, David Pace pounds away at his laptop, tablets and phone, writing his own fiction and essays. After two decades of writing and re-writing a novel manuscript, Pace …

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