Ottessa Moshfegh is a fiction writer from New England. Her first book, McGlue, a novella, won the Fence Modern Prize in Prose and the Believer Book Award. She is also the author of the short story collection Homesick for Another World. Her stories have been published in The Paris Review, The New Yorker, and Granta, and have earned her a Pushcart Prize, an O. Henry Award, the Plimpton Discovery Prize, and a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Eileen, her first novel, was shortlisted for the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Man Booker Prize, and won the PEN/Hemingway Award for debut fiction; My Year of Rest and Relaxation, her second novel, was a New York Times bestseller.
“I don't think I'm ever going to get over Ottessa Moshfegh's My
Year of Rest and Relaxation.” —Parul Sehgal, The New York Times
“Ottessa Moshfegh is easily the most interesting contemporary
American writer on the subject of being alive when being alive
feels terrible. She has a freaky and pure way of accessing
existential alienation, as if her mind were tapped directly into
the sap of some gnarled, secret tree. . . . Watching Moshfegh turn
her withering attention to the gleaming absurdities of pre-9/11 New
York City, an environment where everyone except the narrator seems
beset with delusional optimism, horrifically carefree, feels like
eating bright, slick candy—candy that might also poison you.” —Jia
Tolentino, The New Yorker
“Darkly comic and ultimately profound new novel. . . . Moshfegh’s
extraordinary prose soars as it captures her character’s
re-engagement.” —Vendela Vida, New York Times Book Review
“Because this is a novel by the superabundantly talented
Moshfegh—she’s an American writer of Croatian and Iranian
descent—we know in advance that it will be cool, strange, aloof and
disciplined. The sentences will be snipped as if the writer has an
extra row of teeth. . . . Moshfegh writes with so much misanthropic
aplomb, however, that she is always a deep pleasure to read. She
has a sleepless eye and dispenses observations as if from a toxic
eyedropper. . . . Though this novel is set nearly 20 years ago, it
feels current. The thought of sleeping through this particular
moment in the world’s history has appeal.” —Dwight Garner, The New
York Times
“Just finished My Year of Rest and Relaxation, by Ottessa Moshfegh:
caustic, funny, dark addition to the lineage of unlikeable female
protagonists (by Mona Awad, Sheila Heti, Anita Brookner, Jean Rhys,
Emily Bronte . . . + grandmamas Lady MacBeth + Medea)" —Margaret
Atwood via Twitter
“The bravado in Moshfegh’s comprehensive darkness makes her novels
both very funny and weirdly exhilarating. . . . As in
Eileen, Moshfegh excels here at setting up an immediately
intriguing character and situation, then amplifying the
freakishness to the point that some rupture feels inevitable. Her
confidence never flags; hers are the novels of a writer
invigoratingly immune to uncertainty and self-doubt.” —Slate
“One of the most compelling protagonists modern fiction has offered
in years: a loopy, quietly furious pillhead whose Ambien ramblings
and Xanaxed bitcheries somehow wend their way through sad and funny
and strange toward something genuinely profound.” —Entertainment
Weekly, Best Books of 2018
“A strange, exhilarating triumph. . . . Moshfegh writes with a
singular wit and clarity that, on its own, would be more than
enough. (Her 2015 debut, Eileen, was shortlisted for the Man Booker
Prize, and Rest has already been optioned for film by Australian
actress Margot Robbie). But the cumulative power of her
narrative—and the sharp turn she takes in its last 30 pages—becomes
nothing less than a revelation: sad, funny, astonishing, and
unforgettable.” —Entertainment Weekly
“Moshfegh’s tale of self-care gone off the rails is a caustically
funny skewering of artistic pretension and consumption, but also a
meditation on grief, privilege and social cohesion.” —Huffington
Post
“The most exciting book of 2018 is about a girl sleeping for a
year. . . . Ingenious, darkly comedic. . . . The novel speeds to
the best last page of any book I’ve likely ever read.” —Vice
“This book isn’t just buzzy and maniacally entertaining—it’s a
mean-spirited, tenderhearted masterpiece.” —New York Post
“My Year of Rest and Relaxation is the most poignant, vulnerable,
mature, and—dare I say it?—sincere work that its gifted author has
yet produced.” —Boston Globe
“In flat, deadpan, unembellished prose recalling the cadences of
Joan Didion and the clear-eyed candor of Mary Gaitskill, Moshfegh
portrays the vacuous interior life (she has virtually no exterior
life) of a narcissistic personality simultaneously self-loathing
and self-displaying. . . . My Year of Rest and Relaxation is most
convincing as an urbane dark comedy, sharp-eyed satire leavened by
passages of morbid sobriety, as in a perverse fusion of Sex and the
City and Requiem for a Dream.” —Joyce Carol Oates, The New York
Review of Books
“Bizarrely fascinating. . . . Moshfegh knows how to spin perversity
and provocation into fascination, and bleakness into surprising
tenderness.” —NPR
“It’s another acerbic character study from an author making a
career out of bringing absurdly unlikable people to life. No one
can discomfit a reader quite like her.” —AV Club
“One of the pleasures of reading Ottessa Moshfegh is
that—unusually, these days—she rarely writes in the present tense.
Instead, the sense of immediacy, the sense of being inside a
character, the sense of things happening and having psychic value,
both to the writer and her reader, is provided by the structure and
content of her sentences. . . . One of the other pleasures of
reading Moshfegh is her relentless savagery. All this is delivered
as comic—it is comic—but it’s not exactly funny, though of course
we laugh.” —Guardian
“Darkly hilarious . . . [Moshfegh’s] the kind of provocateur who
makes you laugh out loud while drawing blood.” —Vogue
“Electrifying. . . a reminder that there is something to life
outside the economic exchange of time for money and money for
goods, even if that unnamed thing is obscure and perplexing and
just a bit monstrous—particularly as a woman. Literature may not
have the all the answers, but it can show us the power and allure
of saying no.” —Vanity Fair
“I was cringing during every moment of Ottessa Moshfegh’s My Year
of Rest and Relaxation, and yet I could not put the book down. . .
. It is mostly, almost by juxtaposition, about the realness of a
more subtle and very private expression of pain, no matter the
cause, no matter how seemingly trivial. That’s what kept me reading
even as my cringing muscles grew sore: feeling in my screwed-up
face, barked laughs, and watery eyes the translation of that
private kind of pain into something I could share.” —Claire Benoit,
The Paris Review
“There’s a casually intimidating power to Moshfegh’s writing—the
deadpan frankness and softly cutting sentences—that makes any
comparison feel not quite right.” —Anne Diebel, London Review of
Books
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