ADVANCE PRAISE FOR LOST IN THE FOREST OF MECHANICAL BIRDS
"Moody needs only four short stories and a novella to win over his audience; these strange, wonderful tales will enchant readers of all stripes, from the literary-minded to the speculative-loving…A brilliant collection of delightfully surreal tales that linger long after reading." –Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"Moody's gorgeously lyrical stories of loss and transformation tread the border between the dream world and waking–fables infused with ordinary life, the quotidian set aglow with a loving and sinister magic." –Dan Chaon, author of One of Us
"Fabulous fabulist stories with sentences tight as harp strings. Moody will unzip your ribcage, extract your heart, and use it for a punching bag. But the heart he puts back will beat beautifully, wildly faster. Dear reader, here is my promise: you'll be a better, wiser person by the last page of this book."–David James Poissant, author of Lake Life and The Heaven of Animals
"Christian Moody is a marvelous storyteller, somehow both innovative and old-fashioned. The stories in Lost in the Forest of Mechanical Birds are full of beauty, and also full of a creeping sense of menace and dread. You read these stories the way you would read the Brothers Grimm, and the modern masters Shirley Jackson and Kelly Link: with a sense of wonder at how well the author knows we humans at our best and at our worst. We are strange in our hearts, and these stories are gripping as they show how much it costs us to try and keep that strangeness hidden. Lost in the Forest of Mechanical Birds will keep you up at night and you will still be thinking about it the next morning. What a debut!" –Brock Clarke, author of Who Are You, Calvin Bledsoe? and I, Grape
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Christian Moody has been published in Esquire, Alaska Quarterly Review, The Cincinnati Review, the Best New American Voices anthology, the Best American Fantasy anthology, and more. He received his MFA in Creative Writing from Syracuse University and PhD in English from the University of Cincinnati. He was a creative writing professor for many years, and currently works as Brand Director for an e-commerce company. He lives in Indianapolis with his two kids and wife, memoirist and illustrator Margaret Kimball.