A Summer/Fall 2018 Indies Introduce Debut Fiction Selection
When Samuel Johnson dies, he finds himself in the body of the man who killed him, unable to depart this world but determined, at least, to return to the son he left behind. Moving from body to body as each one expires, Samuel's soul journeys on a comic quest through an American half-century, inhabiting lives as stymied, in their ways, as his own. A ghost story of the most unexpected sort, Martin Riker's extraordinary debut is about the ways experience is mediated, the unstoppable drive for human connection, and the struggle to be more fully alive in the world.
Martin Riker grew up in central Pennsylvania. He worked as a musician for most of his twenties, in nonprofit literary publishing for most of his thirties, and has spent the first half of his forties teaching in the English department at Washington University in St. Louis. In 2010, he and his wife Danielle Dutton co-founded the feminist press Dorothy, a Publishing Project. His fiction and criticism have appeared in publications including the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, London Review of Books, the Baffler, and Conjunctions. This is his first novel.
Industry Reviews
"Energetic, inquisitive, intellectually ambitious, artistically incandescent, heroically sane. . . . [A] mix of avant-garde sophistication and deep, Realist-type concern for character is probably his work's salient feature." --David Foster Wallace "John Donne once proclaimed, 'I sing the progress of a deathless soul.' Well, so does Martin Riker. His Samuel Johnson's Eternal Return is a masterpiece of metempsychosis. That it also warbles and bellows so brilliantly about fatherhood and husbandhood, about the religious life and the mediated life, is an indication of Riker's range, which is as rolling-field-expansive as his empathy." --Joshua Cohen, author of Moving Kings
"One of our finest readers is now one of our most exciting novelists. . . . A funny, amiable, wholly original time-bender of a debut." --Ed Park
"By turns hilarious and tragic, Samuel Johnson's Eternal Return is a haunting and bizarre novel of twentieth-century television and other forsaken American landscapes." --Azareen Van Der Vliet Oloomi
Praise for Martin Riker:
"Energetic, inquisitive, intellectually ambitious, artistically incandescent, heroically sane. . . . A mix of avant-garde sophistication and deep, Realist-type concern for character is probably his work's salient feature." --David Foster Wallace