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Book Cover for: Dan, Joanna Ruocco

Dan

Joanna Ruocco

"Joanna Ruocco's Dan is a tiny novel that packs a massive punch." --Bustle

Melba Zuzzo, erstwhile innocent of the male-heavy hamlet of Dan, a town located in the foothills of ... somewhere? ... finds herself in a rut. In fact she was probably born into this rut, but today, for some reason, she feels suddenly aware of it. Everything is changing, yet nothing is making sense. The people she might rely upon, the habits she should find comforting--everything is off. It's as if life, which has gone by largely unnoticed up to now, has been silently conspiring against her the whole time. In Dan, Joanna Ruocco has created a slapstick parable that brings together the restless undercurrents and unabashed campiness of Thomas Pynchon with the meandering imaginative audacity of Raymond Roussel. Either Dan is a state of mind, beyond the reach of any physical map, or else it sits on every map unnoticed, tucked beneath the big red dot that tells us YOU ARE HERE.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Dorothy a Publishing Project
  • Publish Date: Oct 1st, 2014
  • Pages: 152
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 6.90in - 5.50in - 0.40in - 0.35lb
  • EAN: 9780989760720
  • Categories: AbsurdistFeministHumorous - General

About the Author

Ruocco, Joanna: - JOANNA RUOCCO earned an MFA in Literary Arts from Brown University and a PhD in Fiction from the University of Denver. In addition to DAN (Dorothy, a publishing project, 2014), she's published several books: THE MOTHERING COVEN (Ellipsis Press), MAN'S COMPANIONS (Tarpaulin Sky Press), A COMPENDIUM OF DOMESTIC INCIDENTS (Noemi Press), and Another Governess / The Least Blacksmith: A Diptych (FC2). A COMPENDIUM OF DOMESTIC INCIDENTS won the 2009 Noemi Press Fiction Chapbook Contest (judged by Rikki Ducornet). Another Governess / The Least Blacksmith: A Diptych won the FC2 Catherine Doctorow Innovative Fiction Prize (judged by Ben Marcus). She also works pseudonymously as Alessandra Shahbaz (Ghazal in the Moonlight, Midnight Flame) and Toni Jones (No Secrets in Spandex). She co-edits Birkensnake, a fiction journal, with Brian Conn.

Praise for this book

"Ruocco spins unusual shapes out of language, but not because her interests are narrowly linguistic. By reshaping language, she redefines the world it conjures forth. Her fiction so often flirts with the fantastic perhaps because she understands that when language stops operating according to its ordinary rules, it creates an alternate reality, swerving away from what normally counts as 'real.'" --The Nation

"Ruocco is consistently inventive. She tilts the world as we know it, challenging our senses." --TriQuarterly

"Ruocco has given serious thought to how much she can do with language while still preserving a story's integrity. . . . Modernist-style experimentation ain't dead yet. Giddy, intriguing stuff from a writer eager to let words misbehave." --Kirkus Reviews

"Ruocco's work is cutting-edge, pushing the established tropes within contemporary fiction, calling her readers to interpret and examine the nuances of seemingly everyday life." --Publishers Weekly

"Dan is a town. A town among mountains, a town with a formerly bustling hosiery district, a town where doctors don't believe in horses and principals go missing while seeking answers in the school basement. But what is Dan really? That is the question at the heart of Joanna Roucco's unsettling (and laugh-out-loud funny) novel, told through a dizzying series of interactions, which themselves conjure memories of other interactions, which themselves often conjure even deeper memories still." --Electric Lit

"Melba is subject to a lot of mansplaining!" --Full Stop

"Ruocco has an ear for sparkling absurdist dialogue and a sense of timing almost unmatched in contemporary American fiction . . . [Dan] is profoundly strange, but as readable and logical as the writing of Lewis Carroll." --The Literary Review

"Like a skeleton key Ruocco has found combinations to unlock more doors then we knew we had. If for nothing else, read Dan for the sentences, and the way the words rub up against each other, placed so perfectly that you know they could not have otherwise been arranged." --HTML Giant