praise
“Selgin excels at blending cinematic imagery into a literary narrative. Each chapter paints a vivid picture of setting, character, and action, setting the scenes with beautifully written establishing shots and smooth transitions that resemble fade-ins or slow dissolves. It’s like watching a movie unfold on the page.” —Live Nude Books
“Peter Selgin’s debut novel Life Goes to the Movies may be read in several ways: first, as a comic romp, with nods to On the Road and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas along the way. And like the colorful cast in Kerouac’s novel—Dwaine Fitzgibbon the stand-in for Dean Moriarty, that famed ‘holy con-man with the shining mind’—the main characters in Life Goes to the Movies take drop-everything-now cross-country trips, ‘doing something so frantic and rushing about.’ Like Kerouac’s Sal, Nigel is a tabula rasa waiting to be inscribed.” —Diagram
about the author
Peter Selgin’s first book of short stories, Drowning Lessons (University of Georgia Press, 2008) won the Flannery O’Connor Award. He edits the journal Alimentum: The Literature of Food, and leads an annual writing workshop in Vitorchiano, Italy. He lives in Spuyten Duyvil, New York.