ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
With his tenth book, celebrated author Brock Clarke once again demonstrates his mastery of the story form.
In Special Election, ingenious fictions target our all-too-familiar preoccupations and vulnerabilities—belonging, (dis)engagement, the struggle for self-worth, the difficulty of loving and being loved, the banality and absurdity of existence. Brock Clarke’s rapier wit, inexhaustible imagination, and brilliant leaps of illogic transform his characters’ desperation and distress into tragicomic delight. In the title story, Lawrence Welk is ousted from heaven to run for governor in present-day North Dakota. In “One Goes Where One Is Needed,” we follow the former Provisional Coalition Administrator of post-liberation Iraq, now a youth ski instructor at Okemo Mountain in Vermont. In “The Slim Jim,” the protagonist finds himself (literally and figuratively) very slowly choking to death on a frozen microwavable burrito.
“There is something wrong with me,” states the narrator of “The Big Book of Useless Saturdays.” This could be said of all the characters in Special Election, and through loopy misdirection and mordant observation, Clarke devotes himself to showing his characters and his readers exactly what is wrong. Yet the sharpness of his attention and lavish ludicrousness of his storylines belie a sneaking affection for this imperfect, disappointing world filled with imperfect, disappointing humans. Though Clarke has been compared to such greats as Barthelme, Bellow, and Saunders, the nine stories in Special Election vibrate at a frequency all his own, showcasing the strengths of one of our most gifted comic writers.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Brock Clarke is the author of nine books, most recently the novel Who Are You, Calvin Bledsoe? and the essay collection I, Grape; or The Case for Fiction. Clarke’s stories and essays have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Boston Globe, Ploughshares, Virginia Quarterly Review, Sewanee Review, and more. His work has appeared in the annual Best American Essays, Pushcart Prize, and New Stories from the South anthologies, as well as on NPR’s Selected Shorts. Clarke is the cohost of the award-winning podcast Dead Writers and the A. LeRoy Greason Professor of English and Creative Writing at Bowdoin College. He lives in Portland, Maine.
REVIEWS
“Clarke’s disquieting, droll work reflects humanity like a dark fun house mirror.”
— Praise for Brock Clarke, Publishers Weekly
“[Clarke] creates books that taste like delicious cuts of absurdity marbled with erudition.”
— The Washington Post
“Clarke has a distinctively winning style. He imagines characters so careful in their reasoning that they are deeply, maddeningly unreasonable but also tenderly hapless at the same time. Mr. Clarke is able to make their isolation both heart-rending and comically absurd.”
— The New York Times
“Clarke dazzles with a dizzying study in extremes, cruising at warp speed between bleak and optimistic, laugh-out-loud funny and unbearable sadness.”
— Publishers Weekly
“Clarke picks apart the fictions we tell one another—and those we tell ourselves.”
— Entertainment Weekly
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Special Election
Reckonings
Big Velcro
The Big Book of Useless Saturdays
Chest Bump
The Slim Jim
One Goes Where One Is Needed
Customs and Alterations
Memphis
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