Watchlist: 32 Stories by Persons of Interest

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Product Details
Price
$16.95  $15.76
Publisher
Catapult
Publish Date
Pages
512
Dimensions
5.5 X 8.2 X 1.3 inches | 1.5 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781936787418

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About the Author
Bryan Hurt is author of Everyone Wants to Be Ambassador to France (Starcherone Books, September 2015), winner of the Starcherone Prize for Innovative Fiction. His stories and essays have been published in The American Reader, Guernica, The Kenyon Review Online, the Los Angeles Review of Books, Tin House, TriQuarterly, and many others. He teaches creative writing at St. Lawrence University in upstate New York.
Reviews
"Writers like T.C. Boyle and Cory Doctorow contributed to this surreal anthology of short stories that riff on our modern surveillance culture." --Entertainment Weekly

"Including work by literary heavy-hitters... the anthology considers the act and weight of watching and being watched... and in Watchlist, these see-to-know quests range from funny to terrifying." --Los Angeles Magazine

"Smart, eclectic and carefully observed, this collection illuminates the darker corners within our culture and within our private lives." --San Francisco Chronicle

"What Jonathan Lethem did for amnesia in his anthology The Vintage Book of Amnesia, Bryan Hurt does for surveillance with Watchlist -- a genre of speculative fiction is firmly established. In Aimee Bender's "Viewer, Violator," a painting seems to be watching the head of a museum. T.C. Boyle's "The Relive Box" is about a device that lets you revisit episodes of your life - and nobody gets any more work done. In Cory Doctorow's "Scroogled," everything that you fear happening online. . . is happening. Fortunately, if you close the paperback, the stories can't see you. Maybe. I think." --The National Post

"A brave and necessary set of early flares of the literary imagination into the Panopticon we all find ourselves living inside these days." --Jonathan Lethem

"While I was reading Watchlist on my computer screen, a multilingual secret agent somewhere in Pyongyang, Beijing, or Moscow was reading over my shoulder, my computer screen on her computer screen, and under a mountain in Colorado, an NSA analyst was reading over her shoulder, my computer screen on her computer screen on his computer screen. What I'm trying to say is: you should read Watchlist, but you should read it on paper." --Kyle Minor

"A boldly imaginative, diverse collection of 32 surveillance-themed stories from an international coterie of writers. . . . The varied cross-section of material is stylishly captured by each writer's distinct voice and perspective." --Publishers Weekly

"In this diverse and daring fiction collection, writers of all stripes deal with the act of watching and being watched, subverting and challenging surveillance's obvious connotations and raising questions about our intricate dance with privacy and transparency." --Shelf Awareness

"In this anthology, smart and slightly edgy fiction writers explore what it means to be both the watcher and the watched - and sometimes both simultaneously." --The National Book Review, "5 Hot Books"

A My Bookish Ways May 2015 Must Read