An intense, mordantly funny collection of short fiction from the author ofHomeLandandThe Ask.
A man with an old soul finds himself at a Times Square peep show, looking for more than just a little action. A young man goes into some serious regression after finding his deceased mother's stash of morphine. A group of summer-camp sadists return to the scene of the crime. Sam Lipsyte's brutally funny narratives tread morally ambiguous terrain, where desperate characters stumble over hope, or sometimes merely stumble. Written with ferocious wit and surprising empathy,Venus Driveis a potent collection of stories from a wickedly gifted writer (Robert Stone).
The Picador paperback edition includes an excerpt fromThe Ask.
An intense, mordantly funny collection of short fiction from the author ofHomeLandandThe Ask.
Sam Lipsyte was born in 1968. He has also writtenThe Subject SteveandHome Land, winner ofTheBelieverbook award. He lives in Astoria, Queens.
Not for the faint of heart (or soul),Venus Driveexplores the complexity of despair with poignancy and sly wit. Christine Muhlke, The New York Times Book Review
I like it when short stories--metaphorically speaking, of course--smack me in the face, kind of like what Kafka said about art being like an axe. And so that's what Sam Lipsyte's stories do--they come at you like a fist, they knock you around, they make you wince, they make you look away, and then they make you look back. Jonathan Ames, author of Wake Up, Sir!
These are torqued-up, enthusiastically black-hearted stories by a grimly cheerful author. And the damned things are queerly rather loving and lovely as well. Bukowski meets Paley. Padgett Powell, author of The Interrogative Mood
Lipsyte captures flashes of his characters' complex, addled humanity and smashes a window into their hopelessnesslcī