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In his recent TEV guest review of Home Land, Jim Ruland called Sam Lipsyte the "funniest writer of his generation," and we're quite inclined to agree. We tore through Home Land in two joyful sittings and can't remember the last time we've laughed so hard. Lipsyte's constellation of oddly sympathetic losers is rendered with a sparkling, inspired prose style that's sent us off in search of all his prior work. In Lewis Miner's (a.k.a Teabag) woeful epistolary dispatches to his high school alumni newsletter ("I did not pan out."), we find an anti-hero for the age. Highly, highly recommended.
Pick it up of course. Pick it up.
Posted by: Nick | February 23, 2010 at 12:01 AM
In the captions, each name is accompanied by the label for the addiction. I like Hunter S. Thompson's: "Everything."
Posted by: Amitava | February 23, 2010 at 07:04 AM
Alcohol seems so quaint, doesn't it? Now that everyone is on prescription drugs instead. At least in LA. But somehow oxycontin doesn't quite have the romance of whiskey.
Posted by: Niall | February 23, 2010 at 07:20 AM
Interesting list. It's a shame that Richard Yates is still so tragically overlooked that he doesn't make the cut even as an alcoholic.
Posted by: Chabon McSafran-Foer | February 24, 2010 at 11:57 AM
I'm not really sure how relevant this is. Since America, up until the mid 80s, was basically a country of alkies and dope fiends. It's seem odd to single out the addictions of writers, as though they were something strange or out of the ordinary for the time. I started my career in corporate America in 1983, and even that late in the game it was part for the course for executives to come back from lunch totally plastered, and then go out drinking after work. No one thought anything of it.
It's the current plague of sobriety that makes us think more highly of our modern selves than we ought.
Posted by: Niall | February 24, 2010 at 01:02 PM