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The Night Ocean - by Paul La Farge (Paperback)

 The Night Ocean - by  Paul La Farge (Paperback)
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Last Price: 12.99 USD

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"La Farge's fourth novel is a playfully disorienting tour through the biography of the horror master H. P. Lovecraft, as well as a portrait of a number of men, both fictional and real, who try to decode his life and work...La Farge has great fun constructing texts with contradictory information about the young man, the most entertaining of which involves William S. Burroughs, the strangest Lovecraftian of all."-- <b><i>The New Yorker </i></b> <p/>"I've always been too timid to read H. P. Lovecraft novels and to experience the eldritch wonders within, but I'm greatly enjoying Paul La Farge's new novel, <i>The Night Ocean</i>, on Lovecraftian themes. Like Murakami, La Farge keeps a foot in the familiar while leading you on his eerie adventures." <b>-Sarah Larson, <i>The New Yorker</i></b> <p/> "A beauty of a tale...A book full of pleasures...Dashing, playful and cleverly imagined, <i>The Night Ocean</i> emerges as an inexhaustible shaggy monster, part literary parody, part case study of the slipperiness of narrative and the seduction of a good story."--<b> D. T. Max, </b><i>The New York Times</i> <i>Book Review</i> <p/> "A fascinating, labyrinthine story....La Farge treats readers to two equally compelling and dubious stories....a reminder that in spite of our best efforts, sometimes the truth really is beyond our comprehension." <b>--<i>Boston Globe</i><br></b><br> "The plot unfolds like a series of Russian nesting dolls, and thrillingly so: Like the best of Lovecraft, this novel questions the capacity of language to describe reality with accuracy...<i>The Night Ocean</i> proves to be more than a great read--it's a timely meditation on the challenge of separating artist from art and the limits of human understanding." --<b>Chicago Review of Books</b> <p/> "[La Farge] carries it all off with breathtaking skill and panache....[S]pare yourself the trouble of trying to divine what's true and what's fiction in "The Night Ocean" and just go along for the ride." -<b>The Washington Post</b> <p/>"A breathtaking novel inspired by HP. .Lovecraft, this story takes fan fiction to new levels. It's intricate, original, and a thrill of a read."<b>-- <i>Cosmopolitan </i>(Best New Books for Spring)</b> <p/> <br> "La Farge's rabbit-hole mystery ranges from ancient cultures to modern chat rooms, but hangs together in one woman's absorbing voice." --<i><b>New York Magazine</b></i>, "8 New Books You Need to Read This March" <p/> "A complicated and beautiful demonstration of people trying to live and love in a world of unknowns....Powerful." --<b><i>BOMB</i></b> <p/>"With this intoxicating trip into the twin worlds of imagination and reality, La Farge gives new meaning to fan fiction in his exploration of the world of H.P. Lovecraft and the legacy he left behind." --<b><i>Newsweek</i></b> <p/>"This is a formally and emotionally limber novel that pulls you in as a black lake might, except that it's also funny, and transformative, and illuminating--it's a book of spells if I've ever read one."<b> -Lit Hub</b> <p/>"[La Farge] has surpassed himself. <i>The Night Ocean</i> is the ultimate crossing of the hazy boundary between reality and fantasy....A mighty boon to horror geeks like me who misspent a good portion of our youths reading the pulp fiction of Lovecraft and his unholy minions." -<b><i>BookPage<br></i></b><br>"What a great book...Highly recommended but be prepared." -<b>The H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society</b> <p/> "Remarkable...<i>The Night Ocean</i> is a fabulous novel, in the quite literal meaning of that: it's about tricksters and literary hoaxes and secret identities, but it's really about the fables we make to construct, or discover, or invent ourselves, and about how much we can really get away with." --<b><i>Locus</i> </b> <p/> "This many-layered literary mystery is chockablock with surprise appearances." --<b>BBC.com, "Ten Books You Should Read in March"</b> <p/> "As we traverse a shifting narrative web that spans continents, decades, and spiritual dimensions, La Farge's inventive and absorbing fifth novel reveals that questions relating to love and horror are not always mutually exclusive." <b>--<i>Chronogram <p/></i></b>For a novel about H.P. Lovecraft, <i>The Night Ocean</i> is surprisingly moving; for a story about the recondite back alleys of science fiction, it is surprisingly accessible; for a historical fiction, it is surprisingly contemporary; and for a novel about the unknowable and the mysterious, it is remarkably satisfying. <i>The Night Ocean</i> deserves the highest praise."--<b><i> <b><i>Tor.com</i></b> <br></i></b> <p/>"The universe of <i>The Night Ocean</i> is vast....In a complex, high-concept narrative littered with famous figures, La Farge leaves readers ever uncertain as to who's telling the truth--and ready for the next twist."<br><b>--<i>Elle</i></b> <p/>"Throughout, the novel wobbles between richly researched historical fact... and brilliantly imagined fiction. It will escape no reader that <i>The Night Ocean</i> is itself a work of passion, wordsmithery, and obsession -- a kind of story within a story, if you will, of the sort that Lovecraft would have, well, loved." <br><b>--The Week</b> <p/> "Intricately constructed...His sure-handed world-building [and] empathy...suggest a circle of La Fargeans will someday soon emerge." <br><b>--Albert Mobilio, <i>Bookforum</i></b> <p/>"Was H.P. Lovecraft, the great American horror writer, gay? That's the question at the start of this ingenious, provocative work of alternative history from La Farge ...Like Lovecraft's 'The Call of Cthulhu, ' the novel consists of several sub-narratives, ranging widely in time and place. But instead of a revelation about humanity's diminished place in an impersonal universe, La Farge delivers insights into the human need to believe in stories and the nature of literary fame, while consistently upsetting readers' expectations....[H]e outdoes his predecessors with this crafty mix of love, sex, and lies." <br><b>--<i>Publishers Weekly</i>, (starred review)</b> <p/>"The breadth of La Farge's research and the specificity of his historical details are impressive: we enter the worlds of science-fiction fandom, internet trolls, literary hoaxes, and ancient Mexican civilizations as [he] deftly weaves in famous figures like H.P Lovecraft, Isaac Asimov, and William S. Burroughs. Only a virtuoso could pull off a story so intricately plotted and so full of big ideas about morality and truth...La Farge is this virtuoso, folding stories inside stories with ease.... An effortlessly memorable novel." <br><b>--<i>Kirkus Reviews</i> (starred review)</b> <p/>Magnificent. <i>The Night Ocean </i>is an impossible, irresistible novel, a love letter to the unloveable that speaks the unspeakable. <br><b>- Lev Grossman, </b> author of the Magicians trilogy <p/> "A whole damned hustling heart-broken double-talking meaning-haunted world it is a privilege to enter." <br><b>- Peter Straub</b><i> <p/> </i>"Paul La Farge has crafted the perfect novel - a work that constantly twists into unexpected realms, that illuminates the nature of love and deception, and that is as funny as it is profound. <i>The Night Ocean</i> is a gift to readers." <br><b>- David Grann, author of </b><i><i><b>The Lost City of Z </b></i> <p/> "<i>The Night Ocean</i> </i>had me from the first sentence. This immensely original, elegantly written and continually surprising novel casts a spell that keeps us enthralled until the book's brilliant conclusion. <br><b>- Francine Prose, </b>author of <i><i>Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932</i> <p/> <br> </i>The best novel of the year, almost any year. Historical, hysterical, fanatically attuned to the nuances of language and character, its mission, in its own words, is to 'begin the almost impossible work of loving the world.' It succeeds and then some, but it does more than that. It opens the window and airs out our stuffy literature. It is a book of light and laughter. <br><b>- Gary Shteyngart</b>, author of<i> <i>Super Sad True Love Story</i> <p/> <br> <i>The Night Ocean</i></i> is straight up brilliant. That's no surprise since it's written by Paul La Farge, one of the smartest, wildest literary talents in the game today....A sly, witty, but still loving send-up of H.P. Lovecraft and some of the grand anxieties of the American 20th century. <br><b>- Victor LaValle</b>, author of<i> <i>The Ballad of Black Tom <p/> </i><br> </i>"It has been years since I read a novel with so much joy, impatience and awe. <i><i>The Night Ocean </i></i>overflows with difficult love, not least of all that of our narrator, Marina, who indirectly reminds us of how we are pushed around by dreams, ghosts, chance, and history. I have long been a tremendous admirer of all of La Farge's work; this novel is my favorite." <br><b>- Rivka Galchen</b>, author of<i> <i>Atmospheric Disturbances<br> </i><br> </i>"This story delivers thrills, brews intrigue, and takes literature on a wild ride. <i><i>The Night Ocean</i> </i>is genuinely fantastic." <br><b>- Samantha Hunt</b>, author of <i><i>Mr. Splitfoot<br> </i><br> </i>"An electric exploration of horror, obsession, madness, and mystery. A novel that tunnels deeper into the thorny caverns of the human heart than most dare. To read <i><i>The Night Ocean</i> </i>is to be plunged under a scary smart, morally labyrinthine, and wickedly funny spell. Paul La Farge is one of the most exciting writers working today." <br><b>- Laura van den Berg</b>, author of<i><i> Find Me</i> <p/></i>

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