Critic Reviews
Mixed
Based on 5 reviews on
On the eve of the Occupy Wall Street protests, C is flat broke. Once a renowned textile artist, she's now the sole proprietor of an arts supply store in Lower Manhattan. Divorced, alone, at loose ends, C is stuck with a struggling business, a stack of bills, a new erotic interest in her oldest girlfriend, and a persistent hallucination in the form of a rogue garden gnome with a pointed interest in systems collapse . . .
C needs to put her medical debt and her sex life in order, but how to make concrete plans with this little visitor haunting her apartment, sporting a three-piece suit and delivering impromptu lectures on the vulnerability of the national grid? Moreover, what's all this computer code doing in the story of her life? And do the answers to all of C's questions lie with an eco-hacktivist cabal threatening to end modern life as we know it?
Replaying recent history through a distorting glass, The Visitors is a mordantly funny tour through through a world where not only civic infrastructure but our darkest desires (not to mention our novels) are vulnerable to malware; where mythical creatures talk like Don DeLillo; where love is little more than a blip in our metadata. It peers into How We Got Here and asks What We Do Next, charting the last days of a broken status quo as the path is cleared for something new.
Jessi Jezewska Stevens holds a BA in mathematics from Middlebury College and an MFA in fiction from Columbia University. Her stories and essays have appeared in the Paris Review, Tin House, Guernica, BOMB and elsewhere. Her debut novel, The Exhibition of Persephone Q, was published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux in the US in 2020. She lives in New York, where she teaches fiction.
Supporting writers with the Whiting Award, Creative Nonfiction Grant, and Literary Magazine Prizes
"Debt is the corpus and the grid is the heart that pumps the lifeblood in. No electricity, no data, no debt." For the @StarTribune, Whiting Award winner Ellen Akins reviews THE VISITORS by @JezewskaJ. https://buff.ly/3xARLS6 https://t.co/VhvwyhUSZV
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A two-for-one recommendation: PLANES by Peter C. Baker and THE VISITORS by Jessi Jezewska Stevens, both radical reimaginings of the systems novel, both available now! https://t.co/buQ5liP4Hy
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The Visitors by Jessi Jezewska Stevens review – a wild ride into Occupy-era Manhattan https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/jun/15/the-visitors-by-jessi-jezewska-stevens-review-occupy-manhattan-financial-crash?utm_term=Autofeed&CMP=twt_gu&utm_medium&utm_source=Twitter#Echobox=1655281135
"Elements of the novel (particularly its exploration of cybernetics as a ubiquitous controller of domestic life) recall the work of such 20th-century greats as DeLillo, but Stevens' voice--which is meticulous, wide ranging, and moored in a different perspective from the 20th century's predominantly white male hegemonies--makes her work particularly suited for the current century's artistic needs. Ambitious and powerful--a remarkable novel." --Kirkus Review, starred review
"You might not think Occupy Wall Street and prophetic garden gnomes would fit together within the confines of the same narrative. Now, here's Jessi Jezewska Stevens's new novel The Visitors to make the case that, yes, the two can mesh together seamlessly. It's the kind of ambitious, madcap narrative combination that's all too rare nowadays."--Tobias Carroll, Tor.com
"The Visitors addresses it subjects through a dance of symbols and signifiers." --Wall Street Journal
"[A] mordantly funny requiem for the early 21st century . . . The odd
touch of magic does nothing to diminish the story's uneasy relevance to the contemporary
state of affairs. Fans of such paranoia masters as DeLillo and Pynchon should
give this a look." --Publisher's Weekly
"The
Visitors is a slim book with a lot going on. . . The book accepts, and even
delights in, the strenuous absurdity of its characters' efforts to index the
relationship between the virtual and the material, or to locate the source of
reality in imagination." --Daisy Hildyard, The Guardian
"The Visitors is conceptually
bold. Stevens threads through needles of political theory so deftly you barely
feel them piercing the brain. Her work calmly suggests this: the apocalypse is
coming for us all, baby--so, what are you doing about it?" --Annie Hayter, The
Big Issue
"It's
both a bold, imaginative play on very recent history and a trenchant prophecy
of the terrifying times we're collectively staring down the barrel of." --Anna
Cafolla, The Face Summer Reads 2022
"Jessi Jezewska Stevens's frighteningly brilliant new novel The Visitors is both a bold reimagining of the recent past and an all-too-likely prophecy of what's to come. Caustic, intimate, and consistently surprising, this novel cements Stevens's place as one of the great chroniclers of our cruel and terrifying times." --Andrew Martin
"In Jessi Jezewska Stevens's timeless novel, The Visitors,
"Jessi
Jezewksa Stevens's scalpel-fine prose--slicing with wit and pathos--belies
the bewildering scope of The Visitors, which lays bare everything from
the audacity of modern finance to the visceral costs of debt, love, and
success. Yet while collapse looms nigh, every page beams with defiant jubilance
and gut-punch insights. Equal parts revelatory and moving, The Visitors
cuts to the core of the delusion and disillusionment of our era." --Jakob
Guanzon
"The
Visitors is such a unique gem of a
novel--an intimate and affecting character study that is somehow also a
DeLillo-esque container for diamond-sharp insights into big data,
eco-terrorism, and the subprime mortgage crisis--that, like the garden gnome who
haunts its protagonist, I'm half-convinced it couldn't possibly exist.
But it does, and it is dazzling, and Stevens' readers are incredibly lucky to
have it." --Adam Wilson
"This book is a speedball, with lines as
beautifully sad and weary as John Berryman's lines, and a premise as wild and
lit as one of Philip K. Dick's premises. Stevens is a writer who makes you want
to slow down and read each sentence carefully, even as you want to race forward
and see what happens." --Benjamin Nugent
"One of my favorite writers has written another
imaginative and attentive marvel. The
Visitors is about business: the business of staying alive, the business of
being with others, the business of staying sane, and the business of business."
--Rivka Galchen
"An orgy of synaptic firing and flourish, The
Visitors is a novel of longing, lostness, and late capitalism told with
roving imagination and warmth." --Tracy O'Neill
Bookseller Praise
"Jessi Jezewska Stevens has created a parallel
timeline as tumultuous and dread-inducing as our own, yet somehow this
distorted reality reveals more about the preoccupations of existing than it's
lived counterpart ever could. Part time capsule, part user manual, and part
hallucinatory malware, The Visitors will still be with you
long after the lights have gone out." --Josie Smith, Greenlight Bookstore
"What would you do if an interrogating gnome appeared in your
apartment one morning and never left? If you are C, the artist-protagonist of
Jessi Jezewska Stevens' enthralling novel, The Visitors, you constantly
question whether your gnome is real or imagined, all while operating a NYC art
supply store, mourning the end of your marriage and your fertility, hiding from
personal bankruptcy, and longing for a romantic relationship with your oldest friend,
Zo. Apart from C's personal troubles, a terrorist group called GoodNite is
destroying city power grids and staging protests around the world. Stevens
fully immerses readers into C's world, exploring the artist's relationship to
her craft, how loneliness exploits our deepest fears and vulnerabilities, the
affection and jealousy between childhood girlfriends, and the permanent scar of
immigrant trauma. A clever, thought-provoking novel that is as surprising as it
is satisfying."
--Lori Feathers, Interabang Books
"Stevens'
writing is vicious and cerebral, an enthralling combination. she has a lovely
knack of hinting and alluding to goings-on elsewhere (the best kind of
narration, imho). a cynical sophomore novel that deserves all the praise it
will no doubt receive." --Doug Riggs, Bank Square Books
Praise for The Exhibition of Persephone Q
"Finally a book that exposes how dull Occam's Razor has become after all these years. Adroitly crafted, The Exhibition of Persephone Q is a fun, urbane look at the faulty heuristics of perception and authenticity. Proof positive that in the age of Photoshop and Trumpian Denialism, the simplest explanation no longer applies." --Paul Beatty
"With a voice both lucid and searching, Jessi Jezewska Stevens depicts the great illogic of love, as well as all the small, strange quiddities of being a body in a material and virtual world. Lit up with melancholy, humor, and perfect oddness, this remarkable debut casts an afterglow long after its final pages." --Hermione Hoby
"Jessi Jezewska Stevens's The Exhibition of Persephone Q is a captivating portrait of urban solitude, by turns strange, poignant, and poetic." --Chloe Aridjis
"A triumph of tone and intelligence. Percy Q's perspective is skewed and searching at once, and through her eyes, we see afresh not only New York's post-9/11 landscape but also the world of art, and love, and the process of becoming." --Rivka Galchen
"An intimate and obsessive exploration of the act of seeing and the act of being seen. It's also a metaphysical detective story, an investigation of absence and voids, and a darkly comedic treatise on the art world and living in a series of apartments and rooms in New York . . . The Exhibition of Persephone Q mostly reminded me of taking a walk at night alongside a brilliant companion who has a keen mind, and an eye for absurdity." --Patrick Cottrell, The Believer
"Stevens' debut is a compelling and visually rich novel that explores alienation in all its forms. The book's poetic language and realistically absurd characters will keep readers intrigued until the final page." --Leah von Essen, Booklist