Alec Niedenthal
Alec Niedenthal has had stories appear in The Baffler, The Literary Review, Agriculture Reader, The Toast, Vol. 1 Brooklyn and other venues. He received his MFA from Brown University.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction: David Szalay with Alec Niedenthal
Before this interview I’d read two of David Szalay’s novels, All That Man Is and London and the Southeast (both from Graywolf). The former was nominated for last year’s Man Booker prize; the latter, David’s first novelhe has written a total of fouris being published on our side of the Atlantic for the first time this fall. The text below applies more to All That Man Is than to London, which is a more conventionally structured book.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction: NEEL PATEL with Alec Niedenthal
Neel Patel’s debut collection of stories, If You See me, Don’t Say Hi, is an extraordinary look into many kinds of Indian-American lives: particularly the thwarted dreams and frustrated desires of the young and semi-young. From failed med school exams to mental illness, Patel’s stories have a wide sweep—and a great eye for the complex, the ambiguous, the still-undefined.
Miss Weinburger
By Alec NiedenthalAlec Niedenthals original story, Miss Weinburger, captures the dynamics of the modern American Jewish family. The tableau could be called Rothian, had Roth given Sophie Portnoy the pen and allowed her to chronicle the disappointing childmen who people her world and the persistent desires that get her through the day. Meaning accretes in objectsa gift card to World of Cheesecake, for instance, takes on the weight of loss, and the significance of losing something that might not have been that great to begin with. Were left with complex, hyphenated emotions, like compassionate-deficiency, freeing-loss, and shame-caring.
On Von Chiffon
By Alec NiedenthalWe were in constant awe of himVon Chiffon, this fidgeting boy with a voice that rose without ceasing, a voice that when he began speaking, trundled until it had done.
New Routes in Fiction
A talk with Colm Tóibín
by Alec Niedenthal
Colm Tóibín is a writer most of us might know because of Brooklyn, his novel of Irish emigration across the Atlantic, which takes place in the 1950s. A quiet study of displacement and longing, it was recently adapted for the screen.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction: Tessa Hadley with Alec Niedenthal
Tessa Hadley’s stories and novels treat the humdrum drama of British middle-class life with reverence, intelligence and a certain kind of eye I’m having trouble adding an adjective to.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction:
KEITH GESSEN with Alec Niedenthal
Keith Gessen’s A Terrible Country is a remarkably plotted novel. It proceeds in little twists and bends, gradually gaining scope, like a line that becomes a plane. Gessen’s second work of fiction, it reminds me of how—if I remember right—Tolstoy described War and Peace: not a novel but something else.
New Routes in Fiction: TAYLOR LARSEN with Alec Niedenthal
Stranger, Father, Beloved follows a wealthy New England husband and father of two who, while hosting a party with his wife, meets a man by whom he’d like to be replacedas a husband, and as a father.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction:
David Coventry with Alec Niedenthal
David Coventry’s masterful The Invisible Mile is, on its face, a novel about cycling. It’s about the 1928 Tour de France, when an English-speaking team participated for the first time, a peloton from New Zealand.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction:
Julie Lekstrom Himes with Alec Niedenthal
Mikhail and Margarita is a book equally noteworthy for its addicting plot as it is for the serious questions it asks about the writer’s relation to the state.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction:
JAMEL BRINKLEY with Alec Niedenthal
It feels nice to find innovative fiction that doesn't play games, that tells the story straight. Jamel Brinkley's work is like that, impressionistic at times—interested in the light on the water, the glint on someone's hair—but always caught up in the drama of what it means, and how it feels, to have an interior life.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction: CHRIS POWER with Alec Niedenthal
Powers debut collectionhe has worked as a book critic for twenty yearsMothers treats the loss of self and identity in flux. Always powerful but never too neat, the stories in the book often have a neutral tone that belies the complex turns they take. Mothers marks the arrival of a great talent, and you should read it.
In Conversation
DAVID MEANS with Alec Niedenthal
David Means is, to me, a mystery writer. I dont mean in this the ordinary sense of a writer of whodunits or suspense novels. I mean that at its essence, literature is about a core human, and at times more-than-human, mystery.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction:
SHEILA HETI with Alec Niedenthal
By Alec Niedenthal
Sheila Heti is the author of seven books, including the 2012 novel, How Should a Person Be? which was a New York Times Notable Book and was called by Time magazine "one of the most talked-about books of the year."
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction: ANDREW MARTIN with Alec Niedenthal
Andrew Martin's Early Work is a rich, morally complex novel about infidelity among millenials. What develops is a powerful novel of manners that shows how a subset of smart millenials think, how they love and betray each other.
New Routes in Fiction
A talk with Jaroslav Kalfar
by Alec Niedenthal
Jaroslav Kalfar’s debut, Spaceman of Bohemia, starts by tracing Jakub Procházka’s space flight to Chopra, a cosmic dust cloud of which he, as the Czech Republic’s fictional first astronaut, is meant to return to earth with samples.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction:
ELIZABETH STROUT with Alec Niedenthal
Elizabeth Strout writes fiction that adds and strips away. For every remarkable act of noticing, every tree rustle or bitter wind she gets across, her work hides the profound alienation—self divided from self, parent divided from child—that drives her characters on.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction: KIMBERLY KING PARSONS with Alec Niedenthal
Kimberly King Parsonss first book, Black Light, is aptly titled. Each story reflects light out of darkness. Equally, these stories find rot and provocative weirdness in the well-lit subdivisions of Texan Americamiddle-class parents stand at one or two removes from reality; hotels become heavens to the down-at-heel; children bully and are bullied and proceed by means of fictions.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction
A talk with Jonathan Lee
by Alec Niedenthal
Jonathan Lee’s masterful High Dive is at once a high-minded political novel and an interrogation of how it feels to fail, to stagnate, and of the moments of grace that can occur within stagnation.
In Conversation
New Routes in Fiction
A Talk with Akhil Sharma
by Alec Niedenthal
One voice I trieda third-person focused on the point-of-view of the child. The third-person narrative consumes plot at a different rate at the first-person.