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Book Cover for: East Brother, Stefan Mattessich

East Brother

Stefan Mattessich

East Brother, a literary novel, tells the story of Jess Cooper, a Navy seaman gone AWOL, and his uncle Milo, the last hippie in East Brother, a fictional beach town in Southern California, as both struggle for moral purpose at the end of an era. It offers a realist sense of place as well as the pleasures of the tall tale, character-driven lyricism, and an elegiac social vision of an America that is slowly unraveling its myths.

After dropping acid on leave and landing first in the brig, then in a psychiatric ward, Jess takes refuge with his uncle Milo, thinking he might be able to help figure out what to do next: return to face the music or run away from a pointless life...and from himself. Milo knows a lot about running away. He's been doing it for a long time. Both of them feel trapped between escape and belonging, fantasy and commitment. Looking for a little more self-knowledge over the next three days, they get help from characters like Jack the Cat, a heroin addict who thinks he may have been an international drug lord; Harry Contento, a Machiavellian real estate mogul; Olive Moll, a street kid living on the edge; and Gaspar Zuniga, a forger of Francisco de Zurbaran paintings. By the end, both come face to face with the lies they tell themselves and a truth that is finally much stranger than fiction.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Atopon Books
  • Publish Date: Feb 1st, 2020
  • Pages: 272
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 7.00in - 5.00in - 0.61in - 0.57lb
  • EAN: 9780578572611
  • Categories: LiteraryHumorous - GeneralMagical Realism

About the Author

Mattessich, Stefan: - STEFAN MATTESSICH is the author of three novels: Point Guard, a coming-of-age story set on the Northern California coast of Mendocino; The Riverbed, about intelligent young people coming to learn about the darker sides of the suburban dream they call home; and A Precarious Man, about one man's search for meaning in neoliberal society. He went to Yale College and has a PhD in literature from the University of California, Santa Cruz, where he wrote a monograph on the fiction of Thomas Pynchon called Lines of Flight, published by Duke University Press. He has also written a wide variety of literary criticism and cultural theory. He teaches English at Santa Monica College and lives in Los Angeles.

Praise for this book

"[A]n unflinchingly realistic and achingly sad depiction of a profound lonesomeness - one that can't be remedied by company but. . .isn't completely hopeless, either."

- Kirkus Reviews


"A heartbreaking and delicately composed story about the pain of ennui."

- Kirkus Reviews