Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 5 reviews on
Things do not bode well for Father Julius. . . A street preacher decked out in denim robes and running shoes, Julius is a source of inspiration for a community that knows nothing of his scandalous origins.
But when a nearby mental hospital releases its patients to run amok in his neighborhood, his trusted if bedraggled flock turns expectantly to Julius to find out what's going on. Amid the descending chaos,
Julius encounters a hospital escapee who babbles prophecies of doom, and the growing palpable sense of impending danger intensifies . . . as does the feeling that everyone may be relying on a street preacher just a little too much.
Still, Julius decides he must confront the forces that threaten his congregation--including the peculiar followers of a religious cult, the mysterious men and women dressed all in red seen fleetingly amid the bedlam, and an enigmatic smoking figure who seems to know what's going to happen just before it does.
The Revisionaries is a wildly imaginative, masterfully rendered, and suspenseful tale that conjures the bold outlandish stylishness of Thomas Pynchon, Margaret Atwood, and Alan Moore--while being unlike anything that's come before.
I'm trying to be kind. Mostly, I write. (He/Him)
@mixedgrass If you haven't read A.R. Moxon's The Revisionaries, you definitely should.
Exec Dir of Environmental Voter Project (@Enviro_Voter), political advisor, proud father/husband. RTs ≠ endorsements. Views are mine, not my employer's (he/his)
Folks, If you're not following and reading A.R. Moxon — @JuliusGoat — you are really missing out. He's one of the smartest, funniest, most insightful and creative people around. Also, read his incredible novel THE REVISIONARIES. https://t.co/ms5mwjaAMv
Querying a book of essays, as one does. He/him. Threads: @armoxon | Bluesky: @juliusgoat.bsky.social | Mastodon: @JuliusGoat@mastodon.social
Doing a "reading" of an excerpt from my novel "The Revisionaries," over at Mastodon, where I can make good use of the higher character limit. It turns out we can be in both places. Come on over! https://t.co/IkNLq003F3
"A spectacular invention ... [Moxon is] a wildly gifted inventor ... Engrossing ..." -- The New York Times
"I'm almost irritated by how much I enjoyed it... It is, by turns and often at once, surreal, absurd, horrifying, earnest and satirical ... written with a playful elegance ... I'm astonished by how compulsively readable it is."-- NPR
"It's a good thing The Revisionaries is so funny. It will prevent whatever civilization that finds it thousands of years from now forming a creepy new religion around it." -- Patton Oswalt
"Reading this maximalist picaresque epic, one finds oneself obsessed with its meticulously rendered dreamscape, both enchanting and shiversome, impossibly otherworldly yet rigorously persuasive. A. R. Moxon is a writer of, it seems, boundless imagination--also heart, also humor--and The Revisionaries is almost maddeningly enjoyable, twist by turn, gorgeous sentence by gorgeous sentence. I loved this novel. Just plain loved it." -- Benjamin Dreyer, author of Dreyer's English
"A beautiful, harrowing, thrilling book. Saints and sinners roam its pages, trying to save the world or themselves, or just figure out what the hell went wrong. Wielding exuberant, intelligent prose, A. R. Moxon grapples with the modern world and its villians and inverts our expectations like hapless turtles. It's a wild ride and a great read." --Audrey Niffenegger, author of The Time Traveler's Wife
"The Revisionaries has not only heart and brains but the lively pulse of a singular voice." --Kelly Link, author of Get in Trouble
"Mind-bending. A headlong adventure yarn set in a vividly-imagined cityscape, The Revisionaries is also a fiendish narrative, as well as a parable at scale about freedom and responsibility." --Martin Seay, author of The Mirror Thief
"The Revisionaries is an audacious, funny, and relentlessly inventive novel. If Kurt Vonnegut had been commissioned to rewrite the Old Testament, this would be the result." --Tom McAllister, author of How to Be Safe
"A darkly contemporary, adult version of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, asks readers to attempt to make sense of its eerie, thought-provoking nonsense." -- Shelf Awareness