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Paperback Super Flat Times: Stories Book

ISBN: 0316738573

ISBN13: 9780316738576

Super Flat Times: Stories

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

With a heightened sense of the boundless possibility and lurking doom that Orwell and Huxley once envisioned, Matthew Derby's stories provide a glimpse into an intricately imagined world: a world in... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Super Fine Tome

[...]There is an introductory piece and "fragment" before we even get to the first story in this book (which is almost more of a fractured kind of novel than traditional collection of short stories). I find the rest of it consistent with the beginning and completely necessary. I wouldn't trust the opinion of someone who only thumbs through books in the fashion described below anyway. This book is something to be read all the way through. It's even better the second time around and promises to age well and improve with many readings. Brilliantly insightful, painfully humorous, and meticulously well written to boot. Think Nathanael West meets P.K. Dick (Dick needs West's help w/his prose) and someone along the lines of Felipe Alfau or Adolfo Bioys-Casares (or later Borges, for that matter). Please, don't just breeze through a fraction of this (or any other book) at a Borders, or wherever, and walk away with the smug assumption you've skimmed the cream off the thing. Buy this book, read the hell out of it and feel good you're supporting an author who's actually living and working without pandering to the dummied-down tastes of a culture that, quite frankly, seems intent on descending into the kinds of conditions he so aptly and imaginatively describes. This is easily the "Winesburg, Ohio" of the future. Ours.

Yeah. Wow.

Almost impossible to explain. It's as if Burroughs and Edward Bond fell asleep too close to one another one night and gave birth to conjoined nightmares with a fanged sense of humor.

Has Franz Kafka Returned?

Matthew Derby is an author of disturbing short stories. His stories abound in non-sequiturs that scintillate and jangle the reader's senses. He examines ideas and notions that could easily be attributed to Franz Kafka, Phillip K. Dick or Kurt Vonnegut. Super Flat Times is about a Kafka-esque future that bends the mind to incredible new shapes as you work to absorb the implications and play of this author's mind. It is also a stunning collection of author Derby's work, which has been published in a stellar array of current magazines. The future that Matthew Derby envisions in this grouping of stories is that of a failed technology, which casts his characters in various modes of survival and relating of their history. There are six stories from the years 5 through 50, another six stories from the year 51 and another six stories from the years 52 through 59. This future world is precisely and intricately created, drawing the reader into a maelstrom of conflicting emotions about the story, characters, ideas, notions and perhaps their own sanity. Is this good literature? Is it good reading? Is it worthwhile? It is a thrill ride for those that like to read and are willing to cast aside conventional notions of what comprises writing and the resulting read. Matthew Derby has a future...bright and shining, a new star in the authorial night sky. A book for readers, a fine collection of short stories and, perhaps, the most successful tease you could read. Twenty-one tales or fragments that are sure to challenge and perhaps please

Super Short Stories

It's Matthew Derby's world, and we're soon to be living in it.I'm not sure what this new genre of writing will be called by the reviewing elite, but I'm going to scoop them with the term "future realism". Classify Derby with fellow future realist Ben Marcus (who it appears Marcus studied with at Brown), and his mastery of language and story structure is on par with what Marcus is producing.This collection of intertwining stories reveals to us a world just slightly forward and to off the left of ours: things have changed slightly, subtly, and for the worse. Meat is the only edible product left, and the children are rewarded for their behavior with chocolate flavored meat cubes, leaving the parents to wonder why they are withholding the treat at all, when, in fact, everything is made from meat. Weapons have settings like "most hurt," synthetic clouds crash into skyscrapers and women have adhesive flaps over their ovaries, so the government can harvest eggs and control procreation.All this is handled with both an overt darkness and wonderful sense of humor that keeps the stories from becoming repetitive. Gears shift from lively and bright to absolutely desolate from narrator to narrator, fleshing out the world as a whole, believable place.Derby's language, sentences and story structures are fantastic. I found myself rereading passages again and again, and laughing out loud.My favorite book of the year thus far: I couldn't wait to get home from work and finish it.

A fascinating mirror of our own humanity.

Using irony and absurdity with the delicacy and dexterity of a brain surgeon wielding a scalpel, Matthew Derby has created a dystopian future that serves as a vehicle to magnify the human condition in all its open ugliness and secret beauty. The book is ostensibly a collection of stories, but the stories blend into a depiction of a society gone terribly wrong and a world where people have abdicated all responsibility to their community. All of the stories share thematic elements and convey a continuity that sets this book apart from a mere collection of short stories and places it in a category all it's own.The ironic, absurd, and often hilarious elements of the stories' setting serve to abstract us in such a way that the only things we can identify with are the human dramas and emotional states that exist regardless of external surroundings and circumstances. In each story, the nature of human interaction and relationship is examined and reduced to it's raw, primal state. The stories remind us that when the SUVs are gone, and Cable TV is no longer working, when all the distractions are removed for our lives, all we truly have is each other and our inherent value is not based on our possessions or our social status but rather, on our ability to relate and feel compassion for our fellows.
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