Picture of author.

Tony Tulathimutte

Author of Rejection: Fiction

6+ Works 688 Members 28 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Tony Tulathimutte at the 2016 Texas Book Festival. By Larry D. Moore, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=53131154

Works by Tony Tulathimutte

Associated Works

The O. Henry Prize Stories 2008 (2008) — Contributor — 110 copies, 2 reviews
Critical Hits: Writers Playing Video Games (2023) — Contributor — 82 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1983
Gender
male
Occupations
novelist
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Massachusetts, USA
Places of residence
San Francisco, California, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

29 reviews
Let me start by saying that I can't think of anyone I'd recommend this book to, not even anyone in my generally game book club. The most adventurous reader I know texted me to say she was setting it aside. I think it's both pretty good and also so entirely located within a subculture -- young people who exist primarily on social media -- that it's not a book written with longevity in mind. Just like Patricia Lockwood's No One is Talking About This, there's a specificity to this book that show more means it might well feel like it's written in a foreign language a decade from now.

This is a collection of short stories in which the characters from other stories all exist in the same world and interact in various ways. The title here is important; each story follows someone who is rejected and for very good reasons. There's the nice guy who is always respectful of everyone, who somehow can't find a woman willing to date him, the woman who is unable to get over anything, the guy who has honed his own taste in pornography until he's unable to form a functional relationship, each character ending up in situations that will make even the most detached of readers cringe inside. All the stories lead to an ending in which the author's own motivations are examined and found wanting. Tulathimutte writes well and he certainly doesn't treat any of his characters kindly. In the stories in which they are not the main character, they appear fine and reasonably normal, but when the spotlight focuses on them, their personal failings are taken to the most extreme point possible. And if all that has not put you off this book, you may well find it both as off-putting and strangely compelling as I did. Just be aware that the author is willing to be explicit in bizarre and stomach-churning ways.
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½
im writing this review before looking at any other review. oh my god. oh my god.
the effortless way TT weaves through the complex justifications and re-justifications, thought spirals, and shame of the chronically online and/or chronically lonely, in a way that is painful, relatable, and so hilarious, is COMPLETELY unique of anything i would have ever expected. i marveled at how he found a through line connecting people, non-people, freaks, monsters, and everything in between, told in a show more colloquial tone yet without making his reader feel stupid. i cannot emphasize how FUNNY this book is, while also being incredibly valuable and relatable. THIS is what i mean when i say fiction isnt fake.
my favorite story was Ahegao, but the first three in general were the best. i liked Ahegao the most because of the incredibly uncomfortable feeling of inhabiting Kant's mind, his painfully awkward situations, and of course, the long and detailed description of his depraved sexual fantasies. despite the fact that this is a delight to read for that part alone, within the context of the rest of the story, and the whole book, it is a look into a mind swirling with deep shame manifesting in new and horrid ways due to the internet.

the flaws i found in the remaining parts are almost explicitly mentioned in the Appendix, which is just awesome. this book is just awesome. every word is painstakingly intentional, you can see the authors own shame and thought spiraling in play, while he acknowledges it in his characters and ultimately in himself. WHAT ELSE CAN TOP THIS??!?
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In many ways, my dream format for a novel - a series of interconnecting short stories that gradually reveal a larger whole. Winesberg, Ohio, Dubliners, Cloud Atlas, Let the Great World Spin, etc etc.

Rejection takes that format and applies the grievances and the internet centric identity politics of the Trump era. At times transcendent ("Discourse is loneliness disguised as war") and at times squirm inducing in its voyeurism, Rejection seems worthy of revisiting. In ten years it will either show more be a time capsule of a departed zeitgeist or it will be the vanguard and herald of an age. show less
This author is surprisingly hilarious. Satirical observations about modern life (or at least, the lives of the younger generation). The characters in these seven thematically connected short stories are all kind of a mess, but stories vary in style and approach. It's one of the funniest books I've read this year. It goes to some pretty crazy places and you get the feeling that he has created fictions exactly as he wants them and in doing so, seems to me to be a fresh and unique voice. I also show more was impressed with the writing, there were many clever insights peppered throughout. show less

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Statistics

Works
6
Also by
2
Members
688
Popularity
#36,763
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
28
ISBNs
26
Languages
2

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