Book description
Chase Insteadman is a handsome, inoffensive fixture on Manhattan's
social scene, living off his earnings as a child star. Chase owes his
current social status to an ongoing tragedy much covered in the
tabloids: His teenage sweetheart and fiancée, Janice Trumbull, is
trapped by a layer of low-orbit mines on the International Space
Station, from which she sends him rapturous and heartbreaking love
letters. Like Janice, Chase is adrift, and trapped in a vague routine
punctuated only by Upper Eastside dinner parties and engagements. Into
Chase's life enters Perkus Tooth, a wall-eyed free-range pop-critic,
whose soaring conspiratorial riffs are fueled by high-grade marijuana,
mammoth cheeseburgers and a desperate ache for meaning. Perkus'
countercultural savvy and voracious paranoia draw Chase into another
Manhattan, where questions of what is real, what is fake and who is
complicit take on a life-shattering urgency. Together Chase and Perkus
attempt to unearth the Truth - that rarest of artifacts on an island
where everything can be bought. Beautiful and tawdry, tragic and
forgiving, Lethem's new novel is as always, utterly unique.
Jonathan Lethem was born in New York and is the author of novels
including Fortress of Solitude and Motherless Brooklyn, which was
named Novel of the Year by Esquire and won the National Book Critics
Circle Award and the Salon Book Award, as well as the Macallan Crime
Writers Association Gold Dagger. He has also written two short story
collections, a novella and a collection of essays, edited The Vintage
Book of Amnesia, guest-edited The Year's Best Music Writing 2002, and
was the founding fiction editor of Fence magazine. His writings have
appeared in the New Yorker, Rolling Stone, McSweeney's and many other
periodicals. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.