Recently Viewed Products

New

The More You Ignore Me Travis Nichols 9781566893213

No reviews yet Write a Review
SciFier: $20.88

  Delivery: We ship to over 200 countries!
  New & Used Books: New or Used books available
  Packaging: All orders packed with care
  Range: The biggest selection of CGN, SciFi, Fantasy & Manga
  Reviews: SciFier rated "Excellent" on Trustpilot
  Value: Subscribe to our newsletter for great offers or join our socials!

ISBN:
9781566893213
Weight:
257.00 Grams
In Stock & Ready To Ship!
Availability: Usually dispatched within 15 working days

Frequently Bought Together:

Total: Inc. VAT
Total: Ex. VAT

Description

Praise for Travis Nichols: "A rewarding experience. [Nichols'] sentences repeat and sit inside each other as a sort of Greek chorus that resonates throughout the book."--Chicago Sun-Times "Nichols pulls the readers in ...with breathtaking immediacy...Off We Go into the Wild Blue Yonder is both original and haunting."--Star Tribune (Minneapolis) Charli and Nico's wedding blog has an uninvited guest: a commenter convinced the bride is being romanced by the brother of the groom. To save her from a terrible mistake he adopts multiple identities on multiple message boards, sharing his fears for Charli, his outrage at being thwarted, and the romance, years ago in his analog past, that first attracted his meddlesome care. Cranky, hilarious, and incisive, The More You Ignore Me takes on Internet etiquette, the distortions of voyeurism, and the incessant, expansive flow of words that may not be able to staunch loneliness, but holds out the hope of talking it to death. Travis Nichols was born in Ames, Iowa. He attended the University of Georgia and the University of Massachusetts, where he earned an MFA in poetry. He is the author of the novel Off We Go into the Wild Blue Yonder (Coffee House Press) and two collections of poetry, Iowa (Letter Machine Editions) and See Me Improving (Copper Canyon Press). From 2008 to 2012 he was associate editor of the Poetry Foundation's website and editor of its blog, Harriet. He now works at Greenpeace in Washington, DC.

Endorsements (potential): Blake Butler, Sam Lipsyte, Emily Gould, George Saunders, Tao Lin 400+ copy galley printing for bookseller, media, and librarian outreach National print, radio and online campaign Promotion: AWP, BookExpo America, and ALA Annual Targeted blog tour Book trailer (possibility) Nomination for the Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers program and submission to the New York Public Library's Young Lions Fiction Award Advertising: HTML Giant, The Rumpus, Full Stop Target interviews to online sites with an active community like HTML Giant, The Rumpus, The Quarterly Conversation Giveaway on Twitter, Goodreads, and LibraryThing Promotion on Coffee House Press e-newsletter, website, and social media channels Simultaneous print and e-book release, with e-book ISBN to be included on all press materials, author and publisher websites, and whenever print ISBN is listed Targeted publicity to promote author's speaking engagements Co-op available Promotion via "wedding blog" as website for the novel Promotion via twitter account in the narrator's voice

About the Author
Travis Nichols was born in Ames, Iowa. He attended University of Georgia and the University of Massachusetts, where he earned an MFA in poetry. He is the author of the novel Off We Go Into the Wild Blue Yonder (Coffee House Press) and two collections of poetry, Iowa (Letter Machine Editions) and See Me Improving (Copper Canyon Press). From 2008-2012 he was associate editor of the Poetry Foundation's website and editor of its blog, Harriet. He now works at Greenpeace in Washington DC.

Reviews
"The More You Ignore Me is a novel that will not be ignored. Travis Nichols channels the energies of such exemplary screeders past as Gogol's Poprishchin, Nabokov's Kinbote, Lish's Lish, and Nicholson Baker's woe-beset anthologist, Paul Chowder. Lynksys181, a kind of latter-day Gollum, cries out: 'I know I have love to give! Who will dare to take it?' Reader, you should be the one."--Justin Taylor "With this hilarious and tragic novel, Travis Nichols has captured the menace and pathos and ridiculousness and dead-seriousness of the Internet so well that now I feel a little bit concerned for him. This narrator's voice will resonate in your mind in unexpected ways forever. You've been warned!"--Emily Gould "An experimental novel of obsession and violation that makes Nicholson Baker and Mark Leyner look positively banal."--Kirkus "The unhinged narrator of Nichols's amusing second novel ... is a self-styled 'online justice-seeker and truth-teller.' ... Nichols writes brawny prose and has an easy touch with humor."--Publishers Weekly "The More You Ignore Me, beyond being a farcical joyride of a read, also serves as a critical study of the monopolizing role the internet plays in both fostering and sating the human appetite for connection... In an age in which social life can be lived through a screen entirely, to what extent to we indulge?"--KGB Bar Lit Magazine "In linksys181, Nichols has engaged in a flabbergasting act of literary ventriloquism ... The More You Ignore Me is a Notes from Underground by way of the Huffington Post."--The Seattle Stranger "Nichols is brilliant in capturing the wheedling tone, aggravating escalation and stultifying self-involvement of Internet trolls... [R]aw enough to bring the dark laughter of recognition."--Star Tribune "I had never read a novel so innovative, and Nichols wrote a character that still haunts me. I realized I loved it, and recommended it to anyone who came into the bookstore looking for an unconventional read."--Lit Reactor, "I Hate You...No, Wait, I Love You! 5 Literary 180s" "Travis Nichols' The More You Ignore Me features two of my favorite literary devices, an unreliable narrator and ambitious, experimental form (the novel is one long blog comment) in one of the year's most ambitious and thought provoking novels."--Largehearted Boy: A Music and Literature Blog, "Book Notes" "What Mr. Nichols does brilliantly is examine the inner workings of a delusional and grandiose individual ... on the darker side of the internet: the disconnect that longs deeply for connection, the disparate cry for acknowledgement."--New York Journal of Books "Want a reminder what you can do with fiction? Told entirely as a blog post comment from the perspective of a dude crashing a wedding website, this psychologically-driven novel is what you're looking for."--Bustle "Nichols' prose especially shines when relating the narrator's ambitious project ... Linksys181 may only have found his voice in the digital realm ... but the ultimate roots of his discontent is something altogether understandable: a desire and passion for meaningful human connection."--NYZZYVA "[T]he Ignatius J. Reilly of the Internet age. Prepare yourself for an entertaining read that is funny, creepy, unsettling, sad, and super entertaining."--WORD Bookstore Tumblr "Imagine, for a moment, an Internet troll who writes in complete sentences. Who melds the political fire of a revolutionary with the linguistic precision of a poet. Who peppers his rants with references to Norman Mailer, Buster Keaton, and the Nicaraguan Sandinistas. Do that and you might be able to anticipate the spectacular, deranged protagonist of Travis Nichols' very funny second novel, The More You Ignore Me."--Fanzine "[T]here's something admirable about the way Nichols allows his character the indignity of his prickly tendencies without validating them via sympathetic flashback... The More You Ignore Me reminds us that exploring this sense of failure can itself become the basis for art that is as alive as it is bleak."--Bookforum "Nichols ... actually gets the tone and pitch of the troll down pat. This is a stunning book."--The Volta, "The Volta Picks" "Addressing the internet's ability to unite and divide us at once, magnified by the emboldening power of anonymity and the persuasive gravity of voyeurism, Nichols presents one more serious consideration of personal bias assisted and afflicted by technology."--Denver Examiner "The novels's narrator, ably fashioned by Nichols ... possesses all of Ahab's obsessiveness but none of his courage, can best be imagined as Dostoyevsky's Underground Man with Internet access... Nichols's book is a contribution to the body of obsessive literature."--The Philadelphia Review of Books



Book Information
ISBN 9781566893213
Author Travis Nichols
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint Coffee House Press
Publisher Coffee House Press
Weight(grams) 212g

Reviews

No reviews yet Write a Review


SciFier Socials

Join the SciFier Community for Special Offers, News and Hauls!






SciFier Haul Videos

The very best of SciFier hauls from across Youtube.





SciFier Trustpilot Reviews


L - United Kingdom

Absolutely Fantastic

This was my first time ordering from SciFier but it definitely won't be my last. When it comes to buying books online the packaging needs to be good, SciFier were great they used bubble wrap to make sure they arrived perfect. Amazing range of books that majority are lower priced than most book retailers. Wonderful service, I'll definitely be recommending to everyone. Thank you.

L - United Kingdom

M - Slovenia

My favourite pick for manga

Great delivery to EU, no issues with customs. Very good packaging. A nice selection of manga and, so far, the best prices I could find :)

M - Slovenia

J - United Kingdom

My first time buying from this shop

My first time buying from this shop, but not my last. My books arrived lovely and wrapped up perfectly, just the way we like them. Looking forward to reading then and ordering more, a wonderful online experience. Check it out for yourself, go full geek.

J - United Kingdom

R - United States

Great as always

Same old, same old. Amazing experience, great packaging, shipping was faster since it was a bit smaller and check out was smooth as butter. I have now put myself on a buy allowance because I cannot be trusted lol.

R - United States