The Perturbation of O bookcover

The Perturbation of O

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Description

The Perturbation of O tells the comic story of how a loser became a winner with the publication of his memoir, Gideon's Confession, and the chaotic aftermath that the book and an encounter with Oprah Winfrey have had on two people: Gideon Anderson and Regina Blast, a woman about whom Gideon wrote intimately in his memoir.
Told mostly in a single conversation between Gideon and Regina as they sit on a spring morning drinking coffee and eating pastries, The Perturbation of O deals with concepts of fame and intimacy, and who has the right to speak about whom.

Product Details

PublisherUniversity of Iowa Press
Publish DateApril 29, 2025
Pages144
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781685970024
Dimensions7.9 X 4.9 X 0.5 inches | 0.3 pounds
BISAC Categories: Humor & Entertainment

About the Author

Joseph G. Peterson works in publishing. He is the author of Inside the Whale: A Novel in Verse, and Beautiful Piece, also published by Northern Illinois University Press. He lives in Chicago with his wife and two daughters.

Reviews

"This amusing novel. . . . is a celebration of conversation. . . . Serious readers might have serious conversations about The Perturbation of O, but I doubt they will have conversations as amusing as the one in which Gideon and Regina engage."--Tzar Island book blog
"The Perturbation of O paints a profoundly real picture of the way artists and writers live inside their heads. Much like antiheroes Gideon and Regina, we creative types are a tribe unto ourselves: outsiders, outlanders, misunderstood misfits. Products of American romanticism, we imagine someday somewhere someone will swoop down and lift us up to art heaven, saving our souls and sanctifying our tortured artwork. Then, along comes Joseph Peterson with his latest twisted parable."--Ed Rath, artist

"Gideon was lucky, he came into the world with an abundance of slack. In this world, if your slack is pure, authentic and dazzling, you are golden. Gideon is the 'King of Slack' declares a pop culture demigod--and yet--that only inflames his feelings of shame and guilt about his life. He wishes his best-selling autobiography had never been published and was instead floating 'like a turd upon the waters of Lake Michigan.'
Regina appears in Gideon's book because of a one-night stand she had with Gideon, but most of all because her mystical paintings of light bore into Gideon's consciousness and left a burning impression there. Her career is dramatically affected by her appearance in Gideons book, and she, also born with an abundance of slack, finds herself painting altarpieces not of light but of idolatry.
Peterson draws these characters with intensity, compassion, and humor. He has an orbital camera, taking snapshots of every aspect of their stories as they obsess over the past and over their fate, each time finding some new detail that pokes and twinges their memories with regret in the case of Gideon and wonder in the case of Regina."--Mike Brehm, artist
"I read Joseph Peterson's book in one sitting when it came in the post. I found it extremely engaging and tangent to many of my own personal aesthetic interests. The writing seemed woven together like a long prose poem. The story had a feeling like waves coming onto a shoreline, the high-low feeling of deep concerns and shallow cultural touchstones were fascinating, as if the author wrestled with his own past confessions as a terrible mistakenness. Yes, it's an unusual journey, but it made me wonder about why it's so difficult to tell the truth even in fictional literature. Confessions are always enticing, and this is a juicy tale.
Put more concisely, the story held my attention and hit many points of reference that kept me engaged. The flavor was very contemporary but set in a very specific place and moment that oscillates with ebb and flow of the remembrances. It's sexy without being explicit, a bit fantastic but grounded in the author's self-doubt. Slack is just so then and there."--Frank Gaard, editor, Artpolicecomics
"Joseph Peterson, like his character Regina, is also a 'painter of light' . . . with his mastery of language and dialogue, he is constantly bringing the reader back to the subtle, spiritual underpinnings that are the fabric of story and life."--Robert Silverman, jazz pianist and composer

"Joseph Peterson's whirling, twirling prose winds us deeper into the comical and often dark nature of fame, obsession, art; what it means to be truthful to yourself, and if that's even something worthy of pursuing anymore. This intoxicating two-way conversation will hit upon themes familiar to Gen-Xers who came of age carrying the weight of Slacker culture. But rather than writing another generational celebration of familiar tropes, Peterson peels them back to reveal their absurdist underbelly. This is gripping psychological stuff for readers interested in the dark corners of how art gets made and remade and remade again."--Mark Guarino, author, Country and Midwestern: Chicago in the History of Country Music and the Folk Revival


"Whether channeling Blake or dancing with Oprah, this hypnotic torrent of words slips under the hood of the creative combustion engine to reveal all the leaking oil and rusted pistons."--Jon Langford, musician, The Mekons

"With his signature wit and wisdom, Joseph Peterson's latest offering is a bittersweet exploration of the highs and lows encountered along the border of art and commerce. The Perturbation of O deftly lays bare the heavy toll that fame exacts from the creative soul."--Giano Cromley, author, American Mythology

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