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2009 Shirley Jackson Award for Best Novella (nominee)
This strange, subtle story of father-son disaffection and disjointed love is told with [Joness] signature narrative inventiveness and dark humor. Kris Saknussemm, author of Private Midnight
If drinking mercury from a thermometer didnt kill him, maybe spray painting in an unventilated garage would. Or so Nolans father thought. One inspired yet failed suicide attempt after another, each with a note to his sonwith only a hint of accusation.
But as Nolan sits in an empty office building, the last customer service employee for a nearly obsolete video game, those many suicide notes come back to haunt him. As do the levels of the game that no one plays anymore. And now a homicide detective is on the phone.
Maybe his father was right when he wrote that he was teaching Nolan not to give up, that the only way to understand what happened was to make it to the end of the game. But theres no cheatcode thats going to get Nolan through this . . .
Two unreliable narrators, a bunch of suicide letters, and a plot that collapses on itself just like the characters doStephen Graham Jones is our contemporary Jorge Luis Borges. Michael Kimball, author of Big Ray
Like Lethem and Murakami before him, Jones mines his genre fiction past to bring us a work of startling literary merit. Mystery, horror, sci-fi: the ingredients are all in there. David Goodwillie, author of Kings County
[A] stark exploration of guilt, grief, and fear. . . . And did I mention that its funny? Unplug your consoles, kids, and play this book. Zack Wentz, author of The Garbageman and the Prostitute
Genre: Science Fiction
If drinking mercury from a thermometer didnt kill him, maybe spray painting in an unventilated garage would. Or so Nolans father thought. One inspired yet failed suicide attempt after another, each with a note to his sonwith only a hint of accusation.
But as Nolan sits in an empty office building, the last customer service employee for a nearly obsolete video game, those many suicide notes come back to haunt him. As do the levels of the game that no one plays anymore. And now a homicide detective is on the phone.
Maybe his father was right when he wrote that he was teaching Nolan not to give up, that the only way to understand what happened was to make it to the end of the game. But theres no cheatcode thats going to get Nolan through this . . .
Two unreliable narrators, a bunch of suicide letters, and a plot that collapses on itself just like the characters doStephen Graham Jones is our contemporary Jorge Luis Borges. Michael Kimball, author of Big Ray
Like Lethem and Murakami before him, Jones mines his genre fiction past to bring us a work of startling literary merit. Mystery, horror, sci-fi: the ingredients are all in there. David Goodwillie, author of Kings County
[A] stark exploration of guilt, grief, and fear. . . . And did I mention that its funny? Unplug your consoles, kids, and play this book. Zack Wentz, author of The Garbageman and the Prostitute
Genre: Science Fiction
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Used availability for Stephen Graham Jones's The Long Trial of Nolan Dugatti