Simplify - Tod Goldberg
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From the author of the acclaimed novel Living Dead Girl, a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, come 12 haunting stories about people caught somewhere between love and madness. Simplify, winner of the Other Voices Short Fiction Contest is the first collection of short fiction by Tod Goldberg, and portrays a world where redemption, hope and violence are never too far apart. "The stories in this collection hum with speed and ferocity
and a raw energy that exposes your nerve endings, wakes up places
inside of you that you had happily lulled to sleep. The sharp-edged,
hard-luck boys that populate these pages know exactly how you feel
at two in the morning and are telling the truth about it. Simplify is ruthless and tender, truthful, full of heart and scary in all
the right ways." "Energized, engaging, highly readable-- each one of Tod Goldberg's
stories is a nugget of originality. I started each new story with
fresh interest, wondering where he would take me next-- to bleeding
Elvis, or the Salton Sea, or through the strange way childhood cruelty
rearranges adulthood. A terrific collection." "With Simplify Tod Goldberg places himself in the company of
such modern masters of short fiction as Dan Chaon, Rick De Marinis
and Thom Jones, demonstrating a broad range of styles and moods that
he manages to coalesce into a single and frankly, pretty disturbing
whole." "Tod Goldberg is an amazing true original who plunges deep
into the scary heart of our American life. Hilarious and unnerving,
charming and creepy, dusted with a strange, ineffable melancholy,
these stories made the hair on my head stand up and my eyes fall
out. I recommend Simplify to everyone, everywhere. Read it right
now!" "Things this book has in it:
a Jesus who hangs out at Gay Pride Parades and Toys R’ Us and Starbucks.
a bleeding portrait of Elvis,
the Loch Ness monster. "Simplify captures a wide range of emotions and style in his
debut collection of short stories. Goldberg has thought a lot about
the human condition and the way our hearts and minds define us. He
is effortlessly brilliant with his pared-down prose and attention
to detail. In a society that is disinclined to contemplate our own
deaths, Goldberg hits it head-on with no qualms or fluff. His stories
will provoke and startle you. There is a distinct balance in each
of his stories, giving just enough humor, thought and sincerity to
the entire collection. It’s rare to find a book that can evoke such
strong emotions within a single collection, however, Tod Goldberg’s
Simplify is a force to be reckoned with." "Everybody dies at the end of a Tod Goldberg story. Well, almost.
The ones who don’t die — violently, through hangings, shots to the
heart, slit wrists, drownings, murders — are left to deal with the
emotional and psychological fallout. They are the mothers, fathers,
younger brothers and sisters in Goldberg’s creepy, strangely sardonic,
definitely disturbing version of Middle America...And that, of course,
is where the fun begins." "Building on the reputation of Other Voices, the all-fiction
magazine founded in 1984 in Chicago, editors Gina Frangello and JoAnne
Ruvoli launched Other Voices Books (www.othervoicesmagazine.org)
with the release of Tod Goldberg’s short story collection, Simplify,
last month. Published by the nonprofit Other Voices, Inc., in collaboration
with the University of Illinois Press, Other Voices Books aims “to
keep the short story form vital in today’s competitive and increasingly
commercial marketplace, where short fiction has been largely marginalized
by corporate conglomerate publishers.” The press is off to a good
start with its debut title, which received prepublication blurbs
from Pam Houston, Aimee Bender, and Dan Chaon—all previous contributors
to Other Voices. And Goldberg’s past success won’t hurt either: His
novel Living Dead Girl, published by Soho Press (www.sohopress.com)
in 2002, was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize." "Short story collections are nearly impossible to review, especially
in anything under several hundred words. (How do you comment generally
on a book that contains twelve different stories that vary in plot,
theme, quality, etc.?) Still, there are a few observations that one
can make about Tod Goldberg's Simplify. The stories are sharp and
insightful, many of them dealing with issues emerging from childhood.
The writing is often funny, even when it's painful, and always to
the point, with keen dialogue and a strong voice. Finally, the stories
on the whole are powerful, provocative and a pleasure to read. The
title entry, in particular, is a minor masterpiece." "Tod Goldberg's collection, Simplify, contradicts its title:
Goldberg complicates things, in brilliant and moving ways, in stories
that live along the border between the mundane and the surreal. ...
Goldberg's prose is deceptively smooth, like a vanilla milkshake
spiked with grain alcohol, and his ideas are always made more complex
and engaging by the offbeat angles his stories take." "A keen voice, profound insight...Tod Goldberg's fine ear for
dialogue and for the spoken nuances of social microstrata enable
him to dispense with reams of descriptive background and cut straight
to the heart of the matter. If sometimes his overwhelmed characters
fail to fully engage emotionally, their deadpan delivery of jolting
ironies reaches to laugh-out-loud heights of insight. Even the collection's
title has a sardonic ring. While hardly simple, Simplify is devilishly
entertaining." |



