David Rakoff was the New York Times bestselling author of the books Fraud, Don't Get Too Comfortable, and Half Empty. A two-time recipient of the Lambda Literary Award and winner of the Thurber Prize for American Humor, he was a regular contributor to This American Life. He died in August 2012 at the age of forty-seven, shortly after finishing this book.
"An extraordinarily and deliriously entertaining
work....hearfelt, charmingly profound....[a] giddy, wistful
triumph"
--Paul Rudnick, The New York Times Book Review
"Suffused with joyful invention. Readers may come to the book to
pay their respects, but they will leave rejuvenated by the splendor
of the warmth and wordplay. Composed a hand-span's distance from
death, it feels death-defying....irrepressibly funny, and even
strangely uplifting, in jubilant verse....If this book must serve
as his memorial, it's at least as life-affirming as any that a
writer has left behind"
-Wall Street Journal
"Sly, bravura....a marvel of gamesmanship, Mr. Rakoff describes
hardship, illness, death and depravity, knowing how ingeniously his
book's style and substance would fight each other....gift for
balancing truth telling and humor....future readers can turn to
this book to remember why he was so widely appreciated and is
sorely missed"
--Janet Maslin, The New York Times
"The literary rhythm captures the steady momentum of American
progress....poignant....beautiful and melancholy....with a final
image that made my eyes well up....funny and heartbreaking and,
like Rakoff himself, not easy to forget"
--Entertainment Weekly, A
"Ingenius, delicately haunting.....probing, poignant, and wickedly
funny....illuminate[s] the many stages of life"
--O Magazine
"It's terrific: a sweeping narrative of the 20th century that
encompasses personal tragedy, family secrets and broad social
movements while going down as easy as a bite of creme brulee"
-Gregory Cowles, The New York Times Book Review
"Reading the new novel in verse by David Rakoff, you can hear his
voice again, wordy, so witty, a little worried, and always
wise.....His mordant humor, his compassionate vision, his moral
questioning, his sharp honesty, they're all intimately wedded to
the meter and the zestful diction of the book.....But the new
direction he takes in "Love, Dishonor, Marry, Die, Cherish, Perish"
brings out the best in him, too, as he fits his voice into a
tighter form without ever becoming a slave to that form. He is as
vital, as blackly comic, as bursting forth with detail, as
vernacular, and as poignant in metered verse as he is in his
effortlessly long prose sentences. Each couplet here equally serves
the structural rules, the story, and Rakoff's matchless
sensibility....The narrative is ambitious and has sweep...Agile,
vivid, and entertaining"
-Boston Globe
"Even at six vivid verbs, the title doesn't do justice to the
breadth of this short, acrid, elusive, entrancing book."
--Bloomberg
"Inspired...accessible,
delightful....powerful.... alluringly designed by Chip Kidd and
illustrated by the cartoonist Seth, is filled with the sly, sharp
social commentary that made Rakoff such a favorite....What shines
through in this novel, even more than in his nonfiction, is a
piercing, wistful appreciation for life, love and art....deserves
to become a classic.....a rare bird: moving, amusing, lilting,
crushing."
--Heller McAlpin, NPR
"I just marveled at his words....What he's created in this book is
Seussian"
-Ira Glass, in an interview with O Magazine
"Beautiful and heartbreaking....delightful.... hilarious and lewd
and shot through with a longing for life"
--New York Times
"A novel in rhyming couplets narrated in iambic tetrameter? Why
not?... Along the way, you can have a lot of fun, no matter how
serious the subject - family, sometimes alienating, sometimes
consoling - because of the rhymes. Rakoff makes such pairings as
virago and Chicago, ceases and paresis, skittish and Yiddish,
antelope and envelope, horas and Torahs, Alzheimer's and climbers,
for 100 cleverly rendered and entertaining pages."
-Alan Cheuse, NPR.org
"[A] tour de force novel-in-verse....It is hard not to feel
celebratory over its heart-singing smarts, its existence as a fist
raised against a life ending. What melancholia is there is confined
to its characters - it's a triumphant, moving work of true craft
and wit."
--Austin American-Statesman
"Truly
singular....There is so much bound up in the novel's singsong
verse: stories about AIDS and Alzheimer's, altruism, art, lives
linked together by buried incidents that spring up again to bear
unexpected fruit."
--Ira Glass, The Atlantic
"Rakoff marries deft, humane observation with jauntily tripping
verse structure - in places, you'll find yourself thinking of Dr.
Seuss - to create a series of jewel-toned interlocking
miniatures."--NPR.org
"[A] marvelously barbed novel in verse."
-Elissa Schappell, Vanity Fair's "Hot Type"
"Mesmerizing....Combines his wit and his gravity....Astounding"
--Publishers Weekly
"A fitting memorial to a humorist whose embrace of life encompassed
its dark side....[the book] retains a spirit of sweetness and
light, even as mortality and inhumanity provide a
subtext.....Strong work. It deepens the impact that this was the
last book completed by the author."
--Kirkus
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