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NIGHT, NEON

Joyce Carol Oates

Tales of Mystery and Suspense

From literary icon Joyce Carol Oates comes a brand new collection of mystery & suspense stories, both haunting and darkly humorous.
Dusk, the heartbreak time. Slow-waning light falls upon the river like melting snow. The hour when neon begins. Oates eschews every convention of formal prose storytelling to capture the nuances of the human psyche - from a woman who gets lost on her drive home to her plush suburban home and ends up breaking into a stranger's house, to a freeform interview with a successful novelist that reads as Oates' scathing critique of her own profession, to a first-person account of a cloned 1940s magazine pinup girl being sold at auction and embodying America's ideals of beauty and womanhood. These stories come together to form a poignant tapestry of regular people searching for their place in a social hierarchy, women grappling with their self-worth in a culture that neglects to provide them the support they need to discover themselves. "It is difficult, particularly for a young person, and perhaps for a girl, to break free of the spell of familial love - which can be possessive and stultifying as well as nourishing and enlivening," Oates told The Guardian in 2019. Oates deftly weaves in and out of a stream-of-consciousness writing style to reflect the ways we process traumatic experiences and uncomfortable emotions - the late-night anxieties we often lack the language to adequately convey to anyone outside our own heads. Originally appearing in publications as disparate as Harper's, Vice, and Conjunctions, the stories comprising NIGHT, NEON showcase Oates decades into her illustrious career, in a 21st-century publishing landscape that is still catching up to her unapologetically honest explorations of American identity.
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Published 2021-08-03 by Mysterious Press

Comments

Masterly executed stream-of-consciousness prose bolsters unpredictable, haunting tales [...] The erudite, inventive Oates is always worth reading.

A perfect recipe for nine sleepless nights.

UK: Head of Zeus ; Italian: Carbonio ; Korean: EunHaeng NaMu ; Audio: Recorded Books

Oates' spookiness is visceral, psychologically involving, and socially astute.

Few writers better illuminate the mind's most disturbing corners.

Oates's brand of horror has never required the invocation of other worlds: This world is terrible enough for her. Everything she writes, in whatever genre, has an air of dread, because she deals in vulnerabilities and inevitabilities, in the desperate needs that drive people... to their fates. A sense of helplessness is the essence of horror, and Oates conveys that feeling as well as any writer around.