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Literary Hub, Most Anticipated Books of 2021
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Literary Hub, 22 Novels You Need to Read This Fall
Bustle, Best Books of October 2021
Fans of Haruki Murakamis melancholy, oneiric tales will also delight in Lims assault upon consensus reality. He encourages the reader to stop making sense, in the Talking Heads manner, and experience the universe as a magical tapestry of events whose overall pattern is perceivable only by Godor maybe after ones own death. Paul Di Filippo, The Washington Post
Sometimes new works arrive, such as Eugene Lims strange, sinuous, highly memorable novel Search History that seem to herald some dawning technological epoch. . . . A work of eerie and lasting power. Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
[A] humorous philosophical novel, which entertains questions about the nature of narrative and the aesthetic implications of technology. Subversions of the conventional structure of the novel abound. . . . As the book toggles between the narrators autobiography, a meandering quest for the friend, and conversations among the search party about grief, selfhood, and Asian American authorship, Lim evokes the disorienting idiosyncrasy of an Internet search history. The New Yorker
A post-human manifesto on loss, identity, and the transfigurative potential of art. . . . This brilliant sui generis takes storytelling to new heights. Publishers Weekly, starred review
As befits a book dealing with death and rebirth, the novel oscillates between the uncanny and the philosophical. . . . Lim brings together the mundane and the extraordinary to powerful effect.Kirkus,starred review
Lims novel hints at W.G. Sebald and Kathy Acker, and sits alongside contemporaries such as Ling Ma and Elizabeth Tan. . . . The construction of self and identity and the transformative nature of art underpin a work that, despite being clothed in clever satire and searing humor, is a tender exploration of how we love and what we consequently risk losing, of death and its aftermath, grief. Justine Hyde, Saturday Paper
This novel is very funny. It has a quick wit that comes on barrel-chested, deriding at times poetry, the neo-liberal consensus, and various pop culture ephemera. . . . Search History is a living, breathing novel. Its fascinations and enthusiasms are important yet ambivalent. . . . Mature, without being self-serious or fatalistic. An Ode to Joy in Autotune. Joseph Houlihan, Chicago Review of Books
To read Search History is to fall through a series of trap doors. . . . Often simultaneously hilarious and devastating, Search History is an adventure story that offers profound insight into grief and grieving in the contemporary era. Spencer Quong, Poets & Writers
A rabbit hole of grief and humor in equal measure. . . . Eugene Lim collages it all together masterfully. Suffice to say, its hard to describe to you exactly what happens in these gleefully experimental pages, but I will say this: It sort of feels like Italo Calvinos If on a winters night a traveler and Jeanette Wintersons Frankissstein had a baby that inherited its parents obsessions with storytelling and technology and their penchant for playfulness. Katie Yee, Literary Hub
A delightfully strange little book. K.W. Colyard, Bustle
Lims ability to craft a cohesive narrative with disparate parts can expand our idea of the shapes novels can or cannot take. We dont always know precisely what is happening or who is speaking or what is being referenced but it also doesnt feel all that important. We can feel that itwhatever it isworks. . . . Search History is filled with serious and intelligent musings on the many topics it covers, but its defining characteristic is that it is a genuinely fun read. Michael Wong, Heavy Feather Review
Pure art is the theme, plot, and struggle of the haunted characters in Eugene Lims novels. But book after book, pure art is what Eugene Lim makes. Every time I see a new Eugene Lim book on the shelves, Im grateful. Looking for hope amid our capitalist doom, I read Search History with that exhilarating comfort Ive felt in the best artists of their times, Petronius to Perec, Rabelais to Rizalall of whom demonstrate a bracing commitment to challenging our ideological norms by testing without fear our arts forms. Surveying our planetary wreck on Eugene Lims craft is to see our survival more clearlythrough friendships grief, through loves quest, through the bereaved trust that survivors must sustain in art. Gina Apostol
Search History, Eugene Lims new masterpiece, is a novel of such richness, inventiveness, and strangeness that it rewards multiple readings. Lim has found a way to capture both the pointed specificity of the internet and its Borgesian infiniteness, in order to tell a picaresque tale about race and American culture, artificial intelligence, artmaking, storytelling, and so much more. Oh, and then this is also a novel about a dog! Search History is utterly original, from its opening pages to its final sentences. John Keene
Eugene Lims forthcoming Search History is a thoroughly unconventional novel that explores the depths of human emotion with ingenuity and style. Readers will be kept on their toes by its disconcerting narrative structure. The story alternates conversations between the narrator and friends that delve deep into the terrain of the philosophicalspecifically questioning the subject position of artists of colorwith a hijinks-filled quest to reclaim a dog believed to be the reincarnated form of a dead loved one. Lims devilish satire lends the story a sheen of humor and playfulness that does not detract from its vulnerability and profound meditations on the continuous processes of grieving and contending with ones identity. Search History is a luminous, peerless work that establishes Lim as one of the best-suited authors to write about our distinct moment of environmental decay amidst technological advancement. A heartfelt delight from start to finish. Meghana Kandlur
Praise for Dear Cyborgs:
BOMB Magazine, Best of 2017, selected by Chris Kraus
Vol. 1 Brooklyn, Favorite Fiction Books of 2017
Chicago Review of Books, Best Books of 2017
The Millions, Most Anticipated
Literary Hub, Favorite Books of 2017
Wired, Essential Summer Reads
Buzzfeed, Exciting New Books You Need to Read This Summer
Transfixing from page to page, filled with digressive meditations on small talk and social protest, superheroes, terrorism, the art world, and the status of being marginal. . . . Theres an intoxicating, whimsical energy on every page. Everything from radical art to political protest gets absorbed into the rhythms of everyday life. Hua Hsu, The New Yorker
A novel about art and resistance, and how they may spur each other on, or frustrate their respective goals. In structure it resembles the great mid-century metafictions. . . . Eugene Lims super-comrades, with their cultural disaffection and nuanced political opinions, offer a rather more compelling version of a collective consciousness. David Hobbs, Times Literary Supplement
Two radically different story lines are cleverly tied together in this short, sly, unorthodox novel. . . . The core relationships, whether theyre between estranged childhood friends or opinionated superhumans, are real and profoundly moving. Publishers Weekly, starred review
A novel of ideas, small, elegant ideas about art and protest, and one of the most striking literary works to emerge from the Occupy movement. . . . I had expected the decade's wave of protests to yield a raft of conventional social novelssome earnest, some satirical, perhaps not a few reactionarybut in Dear Cyborgs Lim has delivered something far more idiosyncratic, intricate, and useful: a novel that resists and subverts conventions at every turn." Christian Lorentzen, New York Magazine
I know Im reading a good book when it makes me mutter, What is this? Eugene Lims slim and very weird Dear Cyborgs evoked that response in me plenty of times. . . . Dear Cyborgs is like the image inside a kaleidoscope, especially if that image comes from the midnineties cyberpunk-tinged dream of a middle-aged vegan asleep in Zuccotti Park circa 2011. In other words: it certainly keeps you on your toes. Jeffery Gleaves, The Paris Review
Blew me away with its deceptively blithe mixture of cryptic humor, philosophical ingenuity, and genuine political yearning. It made me think of Robert Bolano and Tom McCarthy. Im hoping to reread it soon for inspiration. Jonathan Lethem, Chicago Review of Books
Haunting. . . . Should vault [Lim] into the first rank of American writers. Ross Barkan, The Village Voice
Surreal, unpredictable, and filled with protest. Lim packs an impressive range of topics into one slim and absorbing novel; everything from comic books to the avant garde to revolution gets its due. This constantly shifting ground seems to transmit a warily hopeful message: any number of possible futures are within our graspif not better, then at least different. Jess Bergman, Literary Hub
A smart, inventive, highly unconventional novel that explores themes of resistance, art, capitalism, and contemporary culture. Jarry Lee, BuzzFeed
Lims third novel might be the most delightful read youll find all summer. . . . Through seamlessly incorporated meditations on political protest and radical art, Dear Cyborgs is an effortless page turner that dares the reader to believe in the power of the imagination. Anelise Chen, The Village Voice
A mind-bending, form-shifting book about superheroes, protest, the art world, Asian American friendship, and the abyss. What's most striking is how brilliantly (and seamlessly) Lim employs slippery narrative techniques in this novel in stories within conversations within dreams. James Yeh, VICE
Cyborgs, comic-book superheroes, protesters in the streets, disenfranchised artists, first-generation immigrants struggling to assimilateall these outsiders, outcasts, and oddballs have more in common with each other than one might think, as Eugene Lims novel Dear Cyborgs beautifully illustrates. Blending Hollywood chase scenes with sharp cultural critiques, hard-boiled detective pulps with subversive philosophy, Dear Cyborgs is a playful and profound meditation on resisting oppression and alienation. Work in Progress
The most lucid book Ive read lately. . . . It is rare to encounter self-aware, genre-spliced postmodernism that is this worldly and purposeful, or pop that is this utilitarian, serious, and searching, or timely state-of-the-nation reckonings that are this optimistic, open, and kindhearted. . . . Quite an achievement. J. W. McCormack, Electric Literature
Relevant, important fiction in the time of political chaos. Superheroes and artistic characters fill the pages with musings and arguments about what matters and whats vital in a life riddled with uncertainties. Sara Cutaia, Chicago Review of Books
Does your book club love comic books? Does it dabble in metafiction? If so, look no further than Eugene Lims Dear Cyborgs, which is sure to be a unique but memorable choice. . . . This book changes gears quickly, and will keep readers on the edges of their seats as they zoom back and forth between our world and the realm of superheroes. Tell your book club to fasten their seatbelts: theyre in for a wild ride. Bookish
Utterly entrancing novel. . . . A lucid, provocative exploration of contemporary culture and themes like power, money, and friendship. Nylon
An entertaining reflection on art, resistance, heroes, and villains. . . . Eerily reflective of our fractured times, darting from subject to subject with the speed of a mouse click. A colorful meditation on friendship and creation nested within a fictional universe. Kirkus
Looking for an inventive story about a friend group of philosophically-minded superheroes? How about the tale of how comic books brought two young misfits together in suburban Ohio? Well, youre in luck: in Dear Cyborgs, you can have both. . . . You might just find yourself charmed by this slim book of brusque sentences and odd, precise descriptions. And the last chapters union of the two narratives doesnt disappoint. Charley Locke, WIRED
Gleefully toying with the conventions of the novel, Dear Cyborgs weaves together the story of a friendships dissolution with a provocative and timely meditation on protest. Through a series of linked monologues, a lively cast of characters explores narratives of resistanceprotest art, eco-terrorists, Occupy squatters, pyromaniacal militantsand the extent to which any of these can truly withstand and influence the cold demands of contemporary capitalism. Tor.com
With comparisons to Tom McCarthy and Valeria Luiselli and praise from Gary Lutz and Renee Gladman, Lims work is worth seeking out. The Millions
A novel of the future. Its surprising, andwhile giving despair its full measureits surprisingly inspiring. A Bolano-esque labyrinth of shaggy-dog stories flow through the narrator, describing the existential and physical conditions of a present in which its easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism, but its written in calm and succinct, elegant prose. Lim nails the amnesia of sensory overload perfectly. Chris Kraus
Eugene Lim tells his sly superhero tales in a kind of hard-boiled deadpana voice at once incongruously comic and playfully soulful. Beneath the dry wit theres an ache of loneliness, an echo of every comic-book readers yearning for the camaraderie of the super team, the intimate enmity of the nemesis. Peter Ho Davies
Eugene Lims Dear Cyborgs is a secret tunnel fresh with cool, strange storms. What is it to be super? What is it to be beyond? Dear Cyborgs is rife with mysteries, heroes, even heartache. Samantha Hunt
Eugene Lim's Dear Cyborgs is a mad badass fan letter to comicdom and a chastening reminder of how Americas greatest fantasy doesn't involve superheroes with superpowers but the prospect of a fair and honest political life. Go read it in the streets. Joshua Cohen
Praise for The Strangers:
Beautifully written, so precise and accurate to real life that it is (fantastically) convincing, Eugene Lim's The Strangers, with its multiple interwoven strands, reveals one surprising character and relationship after the next, and culminates in a skillfully devised and satisfying resolution. A fascinating and engrossing tale. Lydia Davis
Beautiful, original, with delicious surprises lurking at the heart of sentences, of events, of all the engines of communication. Harry Mathews
The Strangers is like a cabinet of curiosities put together by Georges Perec and Andrei Biely. . . . A total pleasure. Susan Daitch
To place the storytelling act at the center of a novel is a risky strategy: the stories must fascinate. Lim's stories do. Review of Contemporary Fiction