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The Teleportation Accident - Ned Beauman

The Teleportation Accident

By: Ned Beauman

Hardcover | 26 February 2013

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In the declining Weimar Republic, Egon Loeser works as a stage designer for New Expressionist theatre. His hero is the greatest set designer of the seventeenth century, Adriano Lavicini, who devised the so-called Teleportation Device for the whisking of actors from one scene to another-a miracle, until the thing malfunctioned, causing numerous deaths and perhaps summoning the devil himself.

Apolitical in a dangerous time, sex-driven in a dry spell, Loeser leaves the tired scene in Berlin in pursuit of the lubricious Adele Hitler (no relation), who couldn't care less about him. Heading first to Paris and then to Los Angeles, he finds his entire tired Berlin social circle reconstituted in exile, under the patronage of a crime writer and his possibly philandering wife. He also finds himself uncomfortably close to a string of murders at Caltech, where a physicist, assisted by Adele herself, is trying to develop a device for honest-to-God teleportation.

Following his breathtaking debut, Boxer, Beetle, Ned Beauman ups the ante, creating in The Teleportation Accident a marvelous mash-up of historical fiction, L.A. noir, science fiction, and satire, and proving himself a star on the rise.
Industry Reviews
Brilliant... If there was ever any worry that [Beauman] might have crammed all his ideas into his first book, the prize-winning "Boxer, Beetle," this makes it clear he kept a secret bunker of his best ones aside.--Joe Dunthorne "The Guardian " "Gobsmackingly clever." --Vanity Fair

"The Teleportation Accident is a singular novel -- singularly clever, singularly audacious, singularly strange--from a singular, and almost recklessly gifted, young writer." --Time.com

"Endlessly witty and furiously inventive, Ned Beauman's second novel... consolidates [his] stature as a formidably accomplished writer... Beauman flaunts an almost indecently pleasurable way with words as he piles on outrageous developments... This [is a] dazzling entertainment. It's rare for a book to stimulate the brain cells and the funny bone with equal gusto, but Beauman has a knack for embedding trenchant philosophical blasts in punch lines... You laugh, then you flinch. On the evidence of his first novel, Boxer Beetle, and now this brilliantly clever and covertly humane book, Beauman promises to keep us laughing and flinching for years to come." --The Washington Post

"Brilliant... If there was ever any worry that [Beauman] might have crammed all his ideas into his first book, the prize-winning Boxer, Beetle, this makes it clear he kept a secret bunker of his best ones aside." --Joe Dunthorne, The Guardian

"Fiendishly clever... This fizzy novel is a great time machine all its own, jumping between the Renaissance and the future, flirting with noir, sci-fi, and romance, and skewering the 'same empty people going to the same empty parties' along the way. Every generation gets the hipster satire it deserves. But this one's for every generation. Grade: A" --Melissa Maerz, Entertainment Weekly

"Inspired... Beauman has an unflagging imagination and an indefatigable gift for comedy." --Publishers Weekly

"Funny and startlingly inventive... Beauman is undoubtedly a writer of prodigious talent, and there are enough ideas [here]... to fill myriad lesser novels." --The Financial Times

"Brilliantly written... A confounding sci-fi-noir-comedy mashup overstuffed with astute social observations, high-brow literary allusions, stupendous Pynchonian names and prose so odd and marvelous that every few pages I had to stop and reread a passage." --Jennifer Reese, NPR.org

"There is so much going on in this truly bizarre novel--everything from slapstick to noir to steampunk--that discombobulated readers may feel as though they've fallen down a narrative wormhole. But what a wormhole! ... Brilliant." --Bill Ott, Booklist (starred review)

"The oversized, exuberant, and farcical plot of The Teleportation Accident is more entertaining than any summary can convey... [Beauman] has the knack for populating his tale with absurd secondary characters, spinning seemingly minor details into long-running jokes, and for placing his protagonist into precarious, comically rich scrapes. The result is rewarding; there are no such thing as pointless digressions in The Teleportation Accident, just the rollicking tale of a hapless Loeser following his heart." --Daily Beast

"As wild a cast of eccentrics and madmen, scammers and venal self-servers, hapless saps and trodden-down dreamers, as you have seen since the heyday of J. P. Donleavy or Evelyn Waugh... Teleporting directly into the ranks of such mythomaniacal jesters as Nick Sagan and Christopher Moore, Ned Beauman kicks any sophomore qualms to the curb." --B&N Review

"Incredibly intelligent, fantastically distracted... You won't read a more memorable novel about sex, obsession and the sticky stuff of science fiction this year, if ever....Profoundly funny, and on the sentence level, simply exhilarating." --Tor.com

"Bizarre, original, and satisfying... [Beauman is] a special talent... He takes the sort of risks that writers under 30 should take, but rarely do." --BookPage

"Beauman has created a wacky mash-up of a hefty number of genres -- historical fiction, noir, slapstick, science fiction and satire -- populated by sinners, ghouls and Caltech physicists and set mainly in the pre-World War II period. And, yes, there is a teleportation device." --Star-Telegram (Fort Worth

"[A] pyrotechnical... violently clever... highly cerebral... frantically entertaining pasteboard extravaganza... Extraordinary." --The Sunday Times

"Popping with ideas, fizzing with vitality, and great fun." --The Independent on Sunday

"Stylistically radical... Virtuosic... An unquestionably brilliant novel, ribald and wise in equal measure... Witty and sometimes deeply moving." --Times Literary Supplement

"A glorious, over-the-top production, crackling with inventive wit and seething with pitchy humour . . . It's as if the English tradition of humorous novels (PG Wodehouse, Kingsley Amis, Evelyn Waugh) and American comic fiction (Thomas Pynchon, Kurt Vonnegut, John Barth) have had their molecules recombined . . . A beguiling success." --The Scotsman

"If you care about contemporary fiction, you must read this." --Tatler Gobsmackingly clever. "Vanity Fair"

"The Teleportation Accident "is a singular novel -- singularly clever, singularly audacious, singularly strange--from a singular, and almost recklessly gifted, young writer. "Time.com"

Endlessly witty and furiously inventive, Ned Beauman's second novel... consolidates [his] stature as a formidably accomplished writer... Beauman flaunts an almost indecently pleasurable way with words as he piles on outrageous developments... This [is a] dazzling entertainment. It's rare for a book to stimulate the brain cells and the funny bone with equal gusto, but Beauman has a knack for embedding trenchant philosophical blasts in punch lines... You laugh, then you flinch. On the evidence of his first novel, Boxer Beetle, and now this brilliantly clever and covertly humane book, Beauman promises to keep us laughing and flinching for years to come. "The Washington Post"

Brilliant... If there was ever any worry that [Beauman] might have crammed all his ideas into his first book, the prize-winning "Boxer, Beetle," this makes it clear he kept a secret bunker of his best ones aside. Joe Dunthorne, "The Guardian"

Fiendishly clever... This fizzy novel is a great time machine all its own, jumping between the Renaissance and the future, flirting with noir, sci-fi, and romance, and skewering the same empty people going to the same empty parties' along the way. Every generation gets the hipster satire it deserves. But this one's for every generation. Grade: A "Melissa Maerz, Entertainment Weekly"

Inspired... Beauman has an unflagging imagination and an indefatigable gift for comedy. "Publishers Weekly"

Funny and startlingly inventive... Beauman is undoubtedly a writer of prodigious talent, and there are enough ideas [here]... to fill myriad lesser novels. "The Financial Times"

Brilliantly written... A confounding sci-fi-noir-comedy mashup overstuffed with astute social observations, high-brow literary allusions, stupendous Pynchonian names and prose so odd and marvelous that every few pages I had to stop and reread a passage. "Jennifer Reese, NPR.org"

There is so much going on in this truly bizarre novel everything from slapstick to noir to steampunk that discombobulated readers may feel as though they ve fallen down a narrative wormhole. But what a wormhole! ... Brilliant. "Bill Ott, Booklist (starred review) "

The oversized, exuberant, and farcical plot of "The Teleportation Accident "is more entertaining than any summary can convey... [Beauman] has the knack for populating his tale with absurd secondary characters, spinning seemingly minor details into long-running jokes, and for placing his protagonist into precarious, comically rich scrapes. The result is rewarding; there are no such thing as pointless digressions in "The Teleportation Accident," just the rollicking tale of a hapless Loeser following his heart. "Daily Beast"

As wild a cast of eccentrics and madmen, scammers and venal self-servers, hapless saps and trodden-down dreamers, as you have seen since the heyday of J. P. Donleavy or Evelyn Waugh Teleporting directly into the ranks of such mythomaniacal jesters as Nick Sagan and Christopher Moore, Ned Beauman kicks any sophomore qualms to the curb. "B&N Review"

Incredibly intelligent, fantastically distracted... You won't read a more memorable novel about sex, obsession and the sticky stuff of science fiction this year, if ever....Profoundly funny, and on the sentence level, simply exhilarating. "Tor.com"

Bizarre, original, and satisfying... [Beauman is] a special talent... He takes the sort of risks that writers under 30 should take, but rarely do. "BookPage"

Beauman has created a wacky mash-up of a hefty number of genres -- historical fiction, noir, slapstick, science fiction and satire -- populated by sinners, ghouls and Caltech physicists and set mainly in the pre-World War II period. And, yes, there is a teleportation device. "Star-Telegram (Fort Worth"

[A] pyrotechnical... violently clever... highly cerebral frantically entertaining pasteboard extravaganza Extraordinary. "The Sunday Times"

Popping with ideas, fizzing with vitality, and great fun. "The Independent on Sunday"

Stylistically radical... Virtuosic... An unquestionably brilliant novel, ribald and wise in equal measure... Witty and sometimes deeply moving. "Times Literary Supplement"

A glorious, over-the-top production, crackling with inventive wit and seething with pitchy humour . . . It's as if the English tradition of humorous novels (PG Wodehouse, Kingsley Amis, Evelyn Waugh) and American comic fiction (Thomas Pynchon, Kurt Vonnegut, John Barth) have had their molecules recombined . . . A beguiling success. "The Scotsman"

If you care about contemporary fiction, you must read this. "Tatler"" "Gobsmackingly clever." - "Vanity Fair" ""The Teleportation Accident "is a singular novel -- singularly clever, singularly audacious, singularly strange -- from a singular, and almost recklessly gifted, young writer." - Time.com "Endlessly witty and furiously inventive, Ned Beauman's second novel... consolidates [his] stature as a formidably accomplished writer... Beauman flaunts an almost indecently pleasurable way with words as he piles on outrageous developments... This [is a] dazzling entertainment. It's rare for a book to stimulate the brain cells and the funny bone with equal gusto, but Beauman has a knack for embedding trenchant philosophical blasts in punch lines... You laugh, then you flinch. On the evidence of his first novel, Boxer Beetle, and now this brilliantly clever and covertly humane book, Beauman promises to keep us laughing and flinching for years to come." - "The Washington Post" """Brilliant... If there was ever any worry that [Beauman] might have crammed all his ideas into his first book, the prize-winning "Boxer, Beetle," this makes it clear he kept a secret bunker of his best ones aside." - Joe Dunthorne, "The Guardian" "Fiendishly clever... This fizzy novel is a great time machine all its own, jumping between the Renaissance and the future, flirting with noir, sci-fi, and romance, and skewering the 'same empty people going to the same empty parties' along the way. Every generation gets the hipster satire it deserves. But this one's for every generation. Grade: A"--Melissa Maerz, "Entertainment Weekly" "Inspired... Beauman has an unflagging imagination and an indefatigable gift for comedy." - "Publishers Weekly" "Funny and startlingly inventive... Beauman is undoubtedly a writer of prodigious talent, and there are enough ideas [here]... to fill myriad lesser novels." - "The Financial Times" "Brilliantly written... A confounding sci-fi-noir-comedy mashup overstuffed with astute social observations, high-brow literary allusions, stupendous "Gobsmackingly clever." - "Vanity Fair" "Brilliant... If there was ever any worry that [Beauman] might have crammed all his ideas into his first book, the prize-winning "Boxer, Beetle," this makes it clear he kept a secret bunker of his best ones aside." - Joe Dunthorne, "The Guardian" "Fiendishly clever... This fizzy novel is a great time machine all its own, jumping between the Renaissance and the future, flirting with noir, sci-fi, and romance, and skewering the 'same empty people going to the same empty parties' along the way. Every generation gets the hipster satire it deserves. But this one's for every generation. Grade: A"--Melissa Maerz, "Entertainment Weekly" "Inspired... Beauman has an unflagging imagination and an indefatigable gift for comedy." - "Publishers Weekly" "Funny and startlingly inventive... Beauman is undoubtedly a writer of prodigious talent, and there are enough ideas [here]... to fill myriad lesser novels." - "The Financial Times" "There is so much going on in this truly bizarre novel--everything from slapstick to noir to steampunk--that discombobulated readers may feel as though they've fallen down a narrative wormhole. But what a wormhole! ... Brilliant." - Bill Ott, "Booklist" (starred review) "Incredibly intelligent, fantastically distracted... You won't read a more memorable novel about sex, obsession and the sticky stuff of science fiction this year, if ever....Profoundly funny, and on the sentence level, simply exhilarating." - Tor.com "The oversized, exuberant, and farcical plot of "The Teleportation Accident "is more entertaining than any summary can convey... [Beauman] has the knack for populating his tale with absurd secondary characters, spinning seemingly minor details into long-running jokes, and for placing his protagonist into precarious, comically rich scrapes. The result is rewarding; there are no such thing as pointless digressions in "The Teleportation Accident," just the rollicking tale of a hapless Loeser follow "Brilliant... If there was ever any worry that [Beauman] might have crammed all his ideas into his first book, the prize-winning "Boxer, Beetle", this makes it clear he kept a secret bunker of his best ones aside." - Joe Dunthorne, "The Guardian""" "Inspired... Beauman has an unflagging imagination and an indefatigable gift for comedy." - "Publishers Weekly" "Funny and startlingly inventive... Beauman is undoubtedly a writer of prodigious talent, and there are enough ideas [here]... to fill myriad lesser novels." - "The Financial Times" "There is so much going on in this truly bizarre novel--everything from slapstick to noir to steampunk--that discombobulated readers may feel as though they've fallen down a narrative wormhole. But what a wormhole! ... Brilliant." - Bill Ott, "Booklist" (starred review) "[A] pyrotechnical... violently clever... highly cerebral... frantically entertaining pasteboard extravaganza... Extraordinary." -" The Sunday Times" "Popping with ideas, fizzing with vitality, and great fun." - "The Independent on Sunday""" "Stylistically radical... Virtuosic... An unquestionably brilliant novel, ribald and wise in equal measure... Witty and sometimes deeply moving." -" Times Literary Supplement""" "A glorious, over-the-top production, crackling with inventive wit and seething with pitchy humour . . . It's as if the English tradition of humorous novels (PG Wodehouse, Kingsley Amis, Evelyn Waugh) and American comic fiction (Thomas Pynchon, Kurt Vonnegut, John Barth) have had their molecules recombined . . . A beguiling success." --"The Scotsman" "If you care about contemporary fiction, you must read this." --"Tatler "

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