- Paperback: 203 pages
- Published: 7/1/00
- IBSN: 9781888451092
- e-IBSN: 9781617752216
- Genre: Fiction
Catalog » Browse by Title: M » Manhattan Loverboy
Manhattan Loverboy (MLB) is paranoid delusion and fantastic comedy in the service of social realism.
“Best Indie Novel of 2000.” —Montreal Mirror
“Best Book for the Beach, Summer 2000.” —Jane Magazine
“Part Lewis Carroll, part Franz Kafka, Nersesian leads us down a maze of false leads and dead ends . . . Joey’s dilemmas are told with wit and compassion, drawing the reader into a world of paranoia and coincidence while illuminating questions of free will and destiny. Highly recommended.”
—Library Journal
“MLB sits somewhere between Kafka, DeLillo, and Lovecraft—a terribly frightening, funny, and all too possible place.” —Literary Review of Canada
“A tawdry and fantastic tale that strolls out of the mind of a seemingly deranged narrator. [I]t is Joey’s search for his own identity that makes this book a winner.”
—Rain Taxi Review of Books
“[F]unny and darkly surreal . . .” —New York Press
Read “SHARD” by Arthur Nersesian, part of Akashic’s Mondays Are Murder series.
A selection of the Akashic Urban Surreal Series.
Nersesian’s debut novel, The Fuck-Up, is now an underground classic, a thriller with a literary soul set in the pre-chic Lower East Side. Nersesian’s brilliant follow-up novel, Manhattan Loverboy (MLB), is paranoid delusion and fantastic comedy in the service of social realism. Updating the picaresque chronicles in L. Frank Baum’s The Wizard of Oz and Kafka’s The Trial, MLB is the tale of an orphan whose only known background is that of the city itself, a scaffold-covered grid sewn together with “Do Not Cross” tape. In this overly suspicious masterpiece, love is expressed through corrective surgery, and families meet across boardroom tables. At each unsignaled turn of the narrative track, Nersesian’s Man-Boy protagonist, Joseph Ngm, must look outside of his own hollow corpus for answers to questions as disparate as “What is my true ethnicity?” “Why are there no vowels in my name?” and “Why am I being toyed with by a corporate scion?” Throughout, Joe dimly discerns that his path has been mapped by someone other than himself.
Raised by mysterious and cold adoptive parents, Joe Ngm searches through history books and Talmudic scriptures for answers. Finding no resolution in an errant sojourn to an Israeli kibbutz, he seizes life’s reins and returns home, proclaiming his new identity through a name change. “In New York, I found myself: I was a man without a consonant—Joey A-e-i-o-u.” While nurturing his new self, the pudgy protagonist is suddenly awarded an unsolicited graduate fellowship at Columbia University. But the fellowship is yanked away just as quickly by unseen powers. Tracing this defunding to a rhombus-shaped citadel on Wall Street, Little Joseph breaks out of his hermitude to challenge the man behind the disappearing funds: Andrew Whitlock. In Joe Aeiou’s haphazard confrontation with the lugubrious CEO of Whitlock Incorporated, he succeeds in falling through the Looking Glass. From that moment on, the modern-day warlord sets his sites on retribution, while from inside a plate-glass skyscraper, Joe falls into “adversarial polarity,” something strangely like love.
ARTHUR NERSESIAN is the author of fourteen books, including the cult-classic national best seller The Fuck-Up (more than 100,000 copies sold), Suicide Casanova, Manhattan Loverboy, East Village Tetralogy, and Mesopotamia. He is a native New Yorker who runs a writing workshop in the East Village and can be reached on Facebook. His latest work is The Five Books of (Robert) Moses.