Genoa

Paul Metcalf author Rick Moody editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Coffee House Press

Published:27th Aug '15

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Genoa cover

  • 400+ Galleys
  • Submitted to Powell's Indiespensable
  • National print, radio, and online campaign
  • Targeted bookseller mailing
  • Excerpts under consideration at BOMB, Guernica
  • Advertising: Bookforum, Shelf Awareness
  • Promotion at: BookExpo America, Winter Institute, ALA Annual, AWP
  • Promotion on Coffee House Press e-newsletter, website, and social media channels
  • Giveaways on Twitter, Goodreads, and LibraryThing
  • Simultaneous print and e-book release, with e-book ISBN to be included on all press materials, author and publisher websites, and whenever print ISBN is listed
  • The 50th anniversary edition of Metcalf's extraordinary novel, a reckoning with Columbus, America, myth, and his great-grandfather Herman Melville."[Genoa] invites us to pass our minds down a new but ancient track, to become, ourselves, both fact and fiction, and to discover something true about the geography of time."-William Gass, The New York Times "Genoa is a spectacular confrontation with Melville's work, the journals of Columbus and molecular biology-all folded into a hallucinatory narrative about two brothers and their different paths through the American century."-Publishers Weekly "Much like his great-grandfather, Herman Melville, Paul Metcalf brings an extraordinary diversity of materials into the complex patterns of analogy and metaphor, to affect a common term altogether brilliant in its imagination."-Robert Creeley "A unique work of historical and literary imagination, eloquent and powerful. I know of nothing like it."-Howard Zinn First published in 1965, Genoa is Paul Metcalf's purging of the burden of his relationship to his great-grandfather Herman Melville. In his signature polyphonic style, a storm-tossed Indiana attic becomes the site of a reckoning with the life of Melville; with Columbus, and his myth; and between two brothers-one, an MD who refuses to practice; the other, an executed murderer. Genoa is a triumph, a novel without peer, that vibrates and sings a quintessentially American song. Paul Metcalf (1917-99) was an American writer and the great-grandson of Herman Melville. His three volume Collected Works were published by Coffee House Press in 1996.

    "Metcalf's masterpiece undermines the idea of authorship while showing a way forward for the novel."--Stephen Sparks, The Scofield "by cobbling together disparate extracts from a variety of sources, Metcalf has recreated that uniquely readerly revelation of finding in unrelated literature of all kinds resonances and echoes that inform one's lived experience."-- Full Stop "Metcalf's investigation of the darkness lying at the heart of human existence is bold, unsentimental and unsparing. One of his quotes from Melville tells it all: "Bail out your individual boat, if you can, but the sea abides."--Lively Arts "Any great book--and yes, Genoa is emphatically great--transcends the tricks in how it was made. It's hard to explain the unique power of what Metcalf has written; better, perhaps, to simply acknowledge that something powerful is happening. Case in point: I seem to have settled on writing whoa in the margins of many pages."-- Electric Literature "There isn't much that one can compare [Genoa] to: in both its form and its incorporation of other works, Anne Carson comes to mind, but in broader strokes rather than more specific ones... Genoa is a slippery book, a literary collage that nonetheless advances with a startling momentum."-- LitHub "A singular novel, blending history and fiction, Metcalf's book follows two brothers, one of whom narrates, as passages from the journals of Melville and Christopher Columbus are woven into the story. It works! And is best pondered seaside."-- Vanity Fair "Fascinating and engaging."--Vol. 1 Brooklyn

    ISBN: 9781566893923

    Dimensions: unknown

    Weight: 269g

    264 pages

    Anniversary Edition