
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 9 reviews on

Expanding the world of his classic-in-the-making debut novel Early Work, Andrew Martin's Cool for America is a hilarious collection of overlapping stories that explores the dark zone between artistic ambition and its achievement
The collection is bookended by the misadventures of Leslie, a young woman (first introduced in Early Work) who moves from New York to Missoula, Montana to try to draw herself out of a lingering depression, and, over the course of the book, gains painful insight into herself through a series of intense friendships and relationships. Other stories follow young men and women, alone and in couples, pushing hard against, and often crashing into, the limits of their abilities as writers and partners. In one story, two New Jersey siblings with substance-abuse problems relapse together on Christmas Eve; in another, a young couple tries to make sense of an increasingly unhinged veterinarian who seems to be tapping, deliberately or otherwise, into the unspoken troubles between them. In tales about characters as they age from punk shows and benders to book clubs and art museums, the promise of community acts--at least temporarily--as a stay against despair. Running throughout Cool for America is the characters' yearning for transcendence through art: the hope that, maybe, the perfect, or even just the good-enough sentence, can finally make things right."Martin's fictional universe of drugs and disappointment, cleverness and self-doubt, shot through with flashes of crackling lucidity, is funny but empathetic toward its deeply flawed characters. Reminiscent of Denis Johnson 's beautiful and insightful 1992 debut, Jesus's Son, Cool for America thrives in the same gorgeous space between chaos and contemplation. In short: Bad people can be good, and they're generally fun to read about." --Nathan Deuel, Los Angeles Times
"[S]imultaneously sharp and self-lacerating and generous and agreeable . . . Cool for America is animated by much the same spirit as Early Work . . . You feel Martin is going somewhere, and the prospect is tantalizing." --Matthew Schneier, The New York Times Book Review "Martin strikes me as less of a kind with Roth or Foster Wallace or Franzen and more decisively a descendant of the great Ann Beattie . . . Like Beattie, Martin compassionately chronicles the sorrows and sex lives of drifting overeducated malcontents . . . In Martin's vision, there is something borderline spiritual in the millennial's desire to consider themselves beholden to forces outside their control." --Jennifer Schaffer, The Nation