We're taking Monday off but we're pleased to announce the novelist Joshua Henkin will be stepping in to take over around here for the day. His latest novel, Matrimony, is getting all sorts of attention these days. Michael Cunningham places it in the tradition of Cheever and Yates, calling it "a beautiful book." The book also received not one but two good reviews from the New York Times. One from Jennifer Egan and one from Janet Maslin. Here's Egan:
The early pages of “Matrimony,” Joshua Henkin’s second novel, call to mind an academic trick employed by Carter Heinz, one of the main characters: “He had started to write what he called beyond-the-scope-of-this-paper papers, in which he would begin by listing all of the things he wasn’t going to write about.” “Matrimony” appears, by turns, to be a campus novel (it begins at Graymont College, a fictional liberal arts school in Massachusetts); a buddy novel (the middle-class Carter forms a friendship with Julian Wainwright, a wealthy New York heir); a writing workshop novel (Carter and Julian meet in one); a meditation on literary influence (the workshop teacher is a cantankerous institution reminiscent of Gordon Lish); and a novel about people writing novels (Carter and Julian both want to, of course).
“Matrimony” is all of these — which is to say it’s none of them, really. Its beguiling quality derives largely from the speed with which it accelerates past these shopworn possibilities into something unexpected.
So, in honor of Josh's guest appearance here on Monday, we're giving away a signed copy of Matrimony today. The song remains the same: Drop an email, subject line "ACHIN' FOR HENKIN". Previous winners ineligible. And you must, must, must include your mailing address. We'll take entries until 6 p.m. PST and then the Random Number Generator will do its deed. And please, do stop by Monday and treat Josh to some of that legendary TEV hospitality.
UPDATE: Congratulations to our winner Carl Gershenson of Chicago, IL.
Yes, Josh Henkin's getting lots of attention, and rightfully so. I saw him today in Atlanta, GA, at the Marcus Jewish Center Book Festival. He was on the "Rising Literary Voices" panel with Rudy Delson and Peter Charles Melman. All three were very entertaining, spoke about their frustrating false starts, the joys and heartaches of fiction writing.
Swell guys, each one.
Posted by: James Simpson | November 11, 2007 at 02:08 PM