Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 3 reviews on
Pain was Joe Grim's self-expression, his livelihood and reason for being.
A superstar boxer who rarely won a fight, Grim distinguished himself for his extraordinary ability to withstand physical punishment.
In this wild and expansive novel, Michael Winkler moves between the present day and Grim's 1908-09 tour of Australia, bending genres and histories into a kaleidoscopic investigation of pain, masculinity, and narrative.
Pain is often said to defy the limits of language. And yet Grimmish suggests that pain - physical and mental - is also the most familiar and universal human condition; and, perhaps, the secret source of our impulse to tell stories.
"Grimmish meets a need I didn't even know I had. I lurched between bursts of wild laughter, shudders of horror, and gasps of awe at Winkler's verbal command: the freshness and muscle of his verbs, the unstoppable flow of his images, the bizarre wit of the language of pugilism--and all the while, a moving subterranean glint of strange masculine tenderness." - Helen Garner
Coach House Books is an independent Canadian publisher of poetry, fiction, drama & nonfiction. Good on paper since 1965. https://t.co/SglKdt09sm
Read this great interview with Michael Winkler (@mcwinkel) with @minor about pain, history, and literary struggles in his novel, Grimmish. https://t.co/XIprQHQbY2
We publish boundary-pushing fiction and essays
A very, very happy publication day to Michael Winkler, whose stunning debut novel Grimmish is out in the UK today – it is, in the words of J. M. Coetzee, “The strangest book you are likely to read this year” ⚡️⚡️⚡️ https://t.co/5myAN1UZAQ
Literary Critic. Book: Beyond the Blurb: On Critics and Criticism. Blog: The Reading Experience. Linktree: https://t.co/QyfLs6wsZD
Issues of Unbeaten Paths (2022). Issue Four (On Marcus Pactor's Begat Who Begat Who Begat, Jen Fawkes's Mannequin and Wife and Tales the Devil Told Me, and Michael Winkler's Grimmish) https://t.co/9vA41HYXhw
"If you like your fiction vital and visceral, then Grimmish fits the bill." - Alistair Braidwood, The Skinny