T. C. Boyle is a novelist and regular contributor to The New Yorker. His novels include World’s End and The Tortilla Curtain, and he has also published numerous collections of short stories. A Distinguished Professor of English Emeritus at the University of Southern California, he lives in Santa Barbara.
Winner of the Prix Medicis Etranger
“A compelling story of myopic misunderstanding and mutual
tragedy.”
—Chicago Tribune
“Succeeds in stealing the front page news and bringing it home to
the great American tradition of the social novel . . . A book to
appreciate as we peer at the faces of strangers outside our
windows, and wall ourselves in.”
—The Boston Globe
“Lays on the line our national cult of hypocrisy. Comically and
painfully he details the smug wastefulness of the haves and the
vile misery of the have-nots.”
—Barbara Kingsolver, The Nation
“Boyle’s writing is irresistible and his sense of dramatic timing
is impeccable.”
—Entertainment Weekly
“America’s most imaginative contemporary novelist.”
—Newsweek
“It says a lot about T. Coraghessan Boyle’s new novel that so many
generations of great satirists come to mind when reading it—from
Swift to Twain to Waugh to Woody Allen, Boyle specifically evokes
Voltaire.”
—The Baltimore Sun
“Weaving social commentary into moving entertaining fiction is a
job few writers can handle. Boyle does so here, admirably. Readers
should not miss this latest work from an impressive talent.”
—St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“Boyle’s sixth novel cements his place among the reigning pantheon
of contemporary American fiction writers. (It’s one heck of a great
read.)”
—Rocky Mountain News
“A panoramic slice of social realism . . . [that] incorporates all
of Boyle’s themes: the impossibility of assimilation, the need for
control, the increasing helplessness of white males.”
—Vogue
“A tale that squeezes one last cup of vinegar from The Grapes of
Wrath.”
—Portland Oregonian
Winner of the Prix Medicis Etranger
"A compelling story of myopic misunderstanding and mutual
tragedy."
-Chicago Tribune
"Succeeds in stealing the front page news and bringing it home to
the great American tradition of the social novel . . . A book to
appreciate as we peer at the faces of strangers outside our
windows, and wall ourselves in."
-The Boston Globe
"Lays on the line our national cult of hypocrisy. Comically and
painfully he details the smug wastefulness of the haves and the
vile misery of the have-nots."
-Barbara Kingsolver, The Nation
"Boyle's writing is irresistible and his sense of dramatic timing
is impeccable."
-Entertainment Weekly
"America's most imaginative contemporary novelist."
-Newsweek
"It says a lot about T. Coraghessan Boyle's new novel that so many
generations of great satirists come to mind when reading it-from
Swift to Twain to Waugh to Woody Allen, Boyle specifically evokes
Voltaire."
-The Baltimore Sun
"Weaving social commentary into moving entertaining fiction is a
job few writers can handle. Boyle does so here, admirably. Readers
should not miss this latest work from an impressive talent."
-St. Louis Post-Dispatch
"Boyle's sixth novel cements his place among the reigning pantheon
of contemporary American fiction writers. (It's one heck of a great
read.)"
-Rocky Mountain News
"A panoramic slice of social realism . . . [that] incorporates all
of Boyle's themes: the impossibility of assimilation, the need for
control, the increasing helplessness of white males."
-Vogue
"A tale that squeezes one last cup of vinegar from The Grapes of
Wrath."
-Portland Oregonian
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