The Debut Novel from Mic Fox and Fort Famly
The framework and functionality of the modern [male] millennial appears to be based entirely upon narrative. There is no better example of this than in the cumbersome, non-coastal interior of the United States, where without the cultural distractions of a coastal city or the cultural heritage that comes with living somewhere that seasons its food, a Midwesterner can act and react to life's simple variables as they come and go. This pace of living creates a divide where one either submits to the mundaneness of the environment in the basement of their mother's home or corrals with others, forming a group of comrades that builds a micro-culture unto their own.Midwestern Pulp, the debut novel from the critically unacclaimed author & illustrator, Mic Fox, focuses on the latter-funneling a group of real-life, completely-fictional characters that you, yourself, didn't not grow up with, through the experience of attending the funeral of a friend. Full of life, death, humor, and heartbreak, this poorly written attempt at self-exploration and dissection of the concept of "home" will inspire you to tip more at the bar and/or call up your 8th grade girlfriend just to "see how it's goin."Review
"...Mic Fox sculpts a tensile, living ecosystem, a nebula of collective resilience, profoundly nonsensical ingenuity, and the aporetic relationship between cultural survivalism, nostalgic reverie, and the persistence of the Platonic ideal of homeplace-the Derridean "at home." Therein he lays bare a rich tapestry of straight-up cinematic diegesis and ethnographic fiction truer-than-life because it's totally made up. As trite as that sounds, it slaps...with heart."
-Tim Woods, Your Bartender's Bartender, Chief Juice Wrangler at Gästkellerei Wines
"Feels like the first bite of Joan Vanderhyden's hot dish in the church basement."
-Ian Bush, Vibe Curator at Banshees Ritual