The Providence-based Deer Tick has been playing together for twenty years, and to celebrate the release of its new album Emotional Contracts, its first in six years, band members have agreed to answer these questions for Vol. 1. Brooklyn. The introspective album, an amalgam of alternative rock, alt country, and Americana, features melodic songs with catchy hooks and sonic guitar loops, prevalent in the closer, “The Real Thing.” Many of the songs including “If I Try To Leave,” “If She Could Only See Me Now,” and “Running From Love” will be surefire sing-a-longs on the band’s 2023 North American Tour, which started on June 21 in Cleveland and culminates in Mexico in 2024. Their website has more information on dates and tickets.
“It’s a Curious Moment When Your Art Upsets You”: An Interview With CJ Leede
Travel to somewhere midway between Nathanael West’s The Day of the Locust and Todd Grimson’s Brand New Cherry Flavor and you’ll find yourself in the realm of CJ Leede’s new novel Maeve Fly. The novel’s title character is a young woman living and working in Los Angeles — all the while growing increasingly alienated from the world around her. If you suspect that sounds like a recipe for something violent and transgressive, you’re completely correct; one of the many compelling features of Leede’s novel is the way it immerses you in Maeve’s world and worldview, until you’re firmly ensconced in a nightmarish place. I spoke with Leede about her work, the role of LA in her fiction, and much more.
Autofiction Chronicles: An Interview With Uzodinma Okehi
Reading Uzo Okehi’s new book, I noted, then wrote to him, “You’re extremely good at depicting things most people want to forget. Okehi’s second book, House of Hunger, is a quasi-autofictional, sort-of college campus novella about an 18 year old Blue Okoye, about to make a decision that could ruin his life. Thus far he’s failed to become an artist. He fails to relate to women. Basically just failing, trying to figure out what, if anything he can do about it. This may sound like familiar ground in 2023, but it often seems to me that so many of our purveyors of cringe and humiliation do so disingenuously, using either the Larry David model; In Losing, I, in Fact, Win, or the Lena Dunham-Annie Ernaux model, Merely Admitting to Loss Confers Moral Victory. In other words, trying to have it both ways. Not so here. House of Hunger is, unambiguously, about a real loser, really losing. Blue Okoye’s pratfalls aren’t really hilarious, nor are they presented as “brave.” They are merely soul crushing, which is not to say boring. From the very first page of “Hunger,” you know you’re reading the real thing, an authentic work of literary art, a book that looks at the thing itself and doesn’t flinch, doesn’t pull any punches, and doesn’t apologize, just grabs the back of your neck and says, Look at this. This is how it is. You hate to admit it, but it’s brilliant.
Six Ridiculous Questions: Leah Angstman
The guiding principle of Six Ridiculous Questions is that life is filled with ridiculousness. And questions. That only by giving in to these truths may we hope to slip the surly bonds of reality and attain the higher consciousness we all crave. (Eh, not really, but it sounded good there for a minute.) It’s just. Who knows? The ridiculousness and question bits, I guess. Why six? Assonance, baby, assonance.
Matthew Robert Cooper on the Literary Inspirations Behind Eluvium’s “(Whirring Marvels In) Consensus Reality”
I’m a longtime admirer of the music Matthew Robert Cooper has made, whether it’s as Eluvium or under his own name — or one of several other aliases and projects that have added to his impressive discography over the years. Eluvium’s new album (Whirring Marvels In) Consensus Reality represents something of a shift for Cooper, who was dealing with health issues that involved changing the way he wrote. I spoke with Cooper about the literary influences underlying this new album, his thoughts on music and technology, and what he’s been reading lately.
Sarah Gerard on “The Butter House” and the Challenges of Writing About Cats
I’d been eager to read something new from Sarah Gerard ever since I finished their 2020 novel True Love. Imagine my happiness when, earlier this year, a package arrived at my apartment containing a new chapbook by Gerard, titled The Butter House. Have I mentioned that I’m a huge fan of single-story chapbooks? Short version: I am. And The Butter House, about a human couple living in Florida and the cats that surround them, is both an engaging read and part of what seems like a literary trend for 2023: humans imagining the lives of animals. I spoke with Gerard about the book’s origins and what sounds like a truly singular release party, among other topics.
“Horror Has Always Been Something That People Are Drawn To”: An Interview With David Peak
David Peak has been writing and publishing novels, short stories and essays online and in print for the last 20 or so years. His books focus on the moment when people recognizable in our daily lives meet the unknown and are either torn asunder by it, or are transformed into something horrible and beautiful. Last year Peak published The World Below (Apocalypse Party), a midwestern gothic story of two long-feuding families, brought into conflict again when their children are caught up in an ritualistic occult murder mystery.
The Real Stories of Fictional Bands: An Interview With Aug Stone
In an era where nearly every detail about every piece of music recorded in the last couple of decades is widely available, what does it mean when an entire band’s body of work turns elusive? That’s the question at the heart of Aug Stone‘s new novel The Ballad of Buttery Cake Ass, the story of the search for the history of a cult early-80s band — and the reasons why their music went unheralded in their day. I spoke with Stone about the making of the novel, creating lengthy discographies for fictional artists, and the challenges of writing convincingly about nonexistent musicians.