Stock up for summer! Buy 2 Books 📚 Get 1 FREE

The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: Mercury Retrograde, Emily Segal

Mercury Retrograde

Emily Segal

Autofiction. Emily Segal, artist and trend forecaster in her 20s, tries to tell the future by reading the present. Literature finds commercial form in the shape of eXe, a mysterious and well-funded internet start-up that offers her a job. A conceptual take-over is deployed; gendered power play ensues; queerness incubates; memes converge. Set in New York City, post-Occupy and pre-Trump. First person / mixed media / pulp. Not actually about astrology. Published in 2020.


Book Details

  • Publisher: Deluge Books
  • Publish Date: Nov 30th, 2020
  • Pages: 216
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.00in - 6.00in - 0.46in - 0.65lb
  • EAN: 9781736210406
  • Categories: • Literary• LGBTQ+ - Bisexual• Feminist

More books to explore

Book Cover for: Perfume and Pain, Anna Dorn
Book Cover for: We Play Ourselves, Jen Silverman
Book Cover for: Keeping the House, Tice Cin
Book Cover for: A Tiny Upward Shove, Melissa Chadburn
Book Cover for: Virginia Woolf in Manhattan, Maggie Gee
Book Cover for: The Body Myth, Rheea Mukherjee
Book Cover for: Tempered, Kate Kort
Book Cover for: All I Should Not Tell, Brian Leung
Book Cover for: Ellipses, Vanessa Lawrence
Book Cover for: Evryn, The Light, Kaighla Rises
Book Cover for: Nevada, Imogen Binnie
Book Cover for: Blood and Guts in High School, Kathy Acker
Book Cover for: Heroine, Gail Scott
Book Cover for: Trash, Sylvia Aguilar-ZĂŠleny
Book Cover for: The Evolution of Love, Lucy Jane Bledsoe

About the Author

Segal, Emily: - Emily Segal (b. 1988, New York, NY) is an artist, writer, and trend forecaster based in Los Angeles. She co-founded the trend forecasting group K-HOLE, and currently directs the think tank and consultancy Nemesis. Her essays and interviews have appeared in e-flux journal, Frieze, Texte zur Kunst, Flash Art, Dazed, Mousse, 032c and many other publications. Mercury Retrograde is her first novel. Emilysegal.net @nemesis_emily (Instagram) @khole_emily (twitter)

Praise for this book

A New York Times New and Notable Book 2020


"Original, funny, and sharp." Harry Strawson, The Times Literary Supplement


"Mercury Retrograde is funny, piercingly smart, and incisive. It feels like it swallowed the Internet without making the Internet its subject or problem, and reads as if a young Bret Easton Ellis were an incredibly smart, feminist contemporary woman with the intellectual powers of Don DeLillo. There's a velocity to Emily's thinking and an incredible collision of high art and pop art which I find absolutely thrilling. It feels disciplined, yet there's an unprocessed quality which makes the book feel immediate and alive. Bingeable, pulpy, and fun, all at the same time." Matthew Specktor, Los Angeles Review of Books


"Emily Segal is almost mystically attuned to the cultural logic of our era. She lives its pangs and contradictions intellectually, emotionally and somatically-late capitalism's Simone Weil." Tom McCarthy


"I really liked reading this book. It's the longest reply to 'where have you been?' you'll ever get from someone you first met in a Skype chat which Emily Segal is to me. It's a brilliantly written novel of a moment in search of a shimmer, half 'here', half digital, an everywhere post branding workplace place where few have dared to live and this writer, explorer, critic, philosopher of nonbusiness has done it deep. Segal's style is widely smart, different than deep (always). I mean her Mercury Retrograde is, it truly is." Eileen Myles


"Mercury Retrograde to me feels like fiction's next historical leap. It's smart and engaging (and bingeable) and yet it also feels necessary in a way that almost all books don't. It's a signpost that points to where the culture is headed, which is heady stuff, yet there you have it." Douglas Coupland


"I had so much fun reading it. It's so fucking smart. It's like a love story between a girl and her intellect. And it's so cool to be all up in there with her." Michelle Tea


"A thought-provoking and often extremely funny first novel looking back at the 2010s, which I couldn't put down. I should also say this book offered some very cathartic food-for-thought on the strange ways capital, cultural capital, and the Internet interacted in the 10s, for those of you who are still haunted by trying to make sense of it all." Emilie Friedlander, VICE


"Segal provides a wickedly sharp and sardonic depiction of the socioeconomic and cultural conditions of a particular cross-section of the city.... Through autofiction, she depicts and reinforces the semantic slipperiness of art, of advertising, of technology-of meaning itself.... What's at stake [in Mercury Retrograde] is not what can be known, but the disorienting, all-too-human experience of not knowing." Kate Silzer, Hyperallergic


"Part lookbook of the era's anxieties and attitudes, part memoir, part satire, Segal's novel navigates these scenes as one should: with humor, irony, and style." Daniel Rathburn, Harvard Review