Synopses & Reviews
"Immensely witty...thoroughly entertaining."--
The Washington Post Book WorldPaul Trilby is having a bad day. If he were to be honest with himself, Paul Trilby would have to admit that he's having a bad life. His wife left him. Three subsequent girlfriends left him. He's fallen from a top-notch university teaching job, to a textbook publisher, to, eventually, working as a temp writer for the Texas Department of General Services. And even here, in this land of carpeted partitions and cheap lighting fixtures, Paul cannot escape the curse his life has become. For it is not until he begins a tentative romance with the office's sassy mail girl that he begins to notice things are truly wrong. Strange sounds come from the air conditioning vents, the ceiling bulges, a body disappears. Mysterious men lurk about town, wearing thick glasses and pocket protectors...
Kings of Infinite Space is a hilarious and horrifying spoof on our everyday lives and gives true voice to the old adage, "Work is Hell."
James Hynes is the author of the novels The Lecturer's Tale, Wild Colonial Boy, and the stories Publish & Perish (all New York Times Notable Books of the Year). He lives in Austin, Texas. A Washington Post Best Book of the Year
Paul Trilby is having a bad day. If her were to be honest with himself, Paul Trilby would have to admit that he's having a bad life. His wife left him. Three subsequent girlfriends left him. He's fallen from a top-notch university teaching job, to a textbook publisher, to, eventually, working as a temp writer for the Texas Department of General Services. And even here, in this land of carpeted partitions and cheap lighting fixtures, Paul cannot escape the curse his life has become. For it is not until he begins a tentative romance with the office's sassy mail girl that he begins to notice things are truly wrong. Strange sounds come from the air-conditioning vents, the ceiling bulges, a body disappears. Mysterious men lurk about town, wearing thick glasses and scary smiles . . .
Kings of Infinite Space is a hilarious and horrifying spoof on our everyday lives and gives true voice to the old adage, "Work is Hell."
"This macabre, funny, and very twisted satire of office life displays James Hynes as a wonderfully eccentric and entirely original writer."Esquire
"Hynes has mastered the art of luring, hooking and reeling readers in with his salty style and quick wit . . . A refreshing escape from the typically mundane plots of commercial fiction"USA Today
"The Kings of Infinite Space is social satire that slides smoothly into horror."Time
"Immensely witty . . . A fast, funny ride through pretty peculiar territory."Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post Book World
"What makes this novel scarierand more ambitiousthan The Lecturer's Talk and Publish & Perish, Hynes's previous books, is that it isn't about the academy. It's about all of usporters, waitresses, office schlubs, and TV anchorwomen, as well as people who read The Norton Anthology of English Literature. They, we, are all trying to rise or at least not fall, haunted by the idea that someoneno matter where we are on the totem poleis richer, more important, hipper, less humiliated than us."The New York Times Book Review
"Very few novels can manage to be both hilarious and creepy, but this one does. Fewer still can show off their smarts without slowing down the plot, but this one does that, too."Laura Miller, Salon.com
"[A] brilliantly twisted new satire . . . a slapstick apocalypse, part H. G. Wells, part Buffy the Vampire Slayer."Time Out New York
"A strange, suspenseful, and splendidly written novel. Think Stephen King writing satire . . . a very funny, very macabre novel, filled with unforgettable characters (the living dead among them)."Nancy Pearl, The Seattle Times "People really do laugh out loud when reading Hynes novels . . . Funny, frightening, smart, and sexy! It is absolutely unlike anything you have ever read."Keith Taylor, Ann Arbor Observer
"Hilarious . . . It's part Falling Down . . . part Lars von Trier's The Kingdom . . . part Temp Slave! 'zine, part erotic love story, and part (of course) The Island of Dr. Moreau."The San Diego Union-Tribune
"In the best tradition of Baum, Carroll, and Orwell, Hynes crafts a mordantly incisive satire on a corporate America where incompetence is rewarded and talent ignored."Booklist
Review
"There's a spirit of H.G. Wells and The Island of Dr. Moreau throughout....Hynes meshes real-life and supernatural horror so that it becomes difficult to distinguish the real and imaginary absurdities." Fred Cleaver, The Denver Post
Review
"By turns ominous, hilarious, and genuinely scary: Hynes offers a highly original send-up of the most unnatural activity ever conceived by the human mind work." Kirkus Reviews
Review
"Deliciously creepy....Hynes's writing is diamond sharp, revealing his characters' souls as surely as a Judgment Day angel." People
Review
"In the best tradition of Baum, Carroll, and Orwell, Hynes crafts a mordantly incisive satire on a corporate America where incompetence is rewarded and talent ignored." Booklist
Review
"At once too ambitious and not ambitious enough, Kings of Infinite Space loads really interesting questions into the mix and then declines to take them seriously enough to satisfy." Donna Minkowitz, The New York Times Book Review
Review
Hynes must moonlight as a fisherman for he has mastered the art of luring, hooking and reeling readers in with his salty style and quick wit." USA Today
Review
"The Kings of Infinite Space is social satire that slides smoothly into horror." Time
Review
"[A] very funny, very macabre novel, filled with unforgettable characters (the living dead among them) and a plot so bizarre it could just possibly be true." Seattle Times
Review
"This macabre, funny, and very twisted satire of office life displays James Hynes (the author of Publish and Perish) as a wonderfully eccentric and entirely original writer." Adrienne Miller, Esquire (read the entire Esquire review)
Synopsis
Paul Trilby is having a bad day. If he were to be honest with himself, Paul Trilby would have to admit that he's having a bad life. His wife left him. Three subsequent girlfriends left him. He's fallen from a top-notch university teaching job, to a textbook publisher, to, eventually, working as a temp writer for the Texas Department of General Services. And even here, in this land of carpeted partitions and cheap lighting fixtures, Paul cannot escape the curse his life has become. For it is not until he begins a tentative romance with the office's sassy mail girl that he begins to notice things are truly wrong. Strange sounds come from the air conditioning vents, the ceiling bulges, a body disappears. Mysterious men lurk about town, wearing thick glasses and pocket protectors...
Kings of Infinite Space is a hilarious and horrifying spoof on our everyday lives and gives true voice to the old adage, "Work is Hell."
Synopsis
"Immensely witty...thoroughly entertaining."--
The Washington Post Book WorldPaul Trilby is having a bad day. If he were to be honest with himself, Paul Trilby would have to admit that he's having a bad life. His wife left him. Three subsequent girlfriends left him. He's fallen from a top-notch university teaching job, to a textbook publisher, to, eventually, working as a temp writer for the Texas Department of General Services. And even here, in this land of carpeted partitions and cheap lighting fixtures, Paul cannot escape the curse his life has become. For it is not until he begins a tentative romance with the office's sassy mail girl that he begins to notice things are truly wrong. Strange sounds come from the air conditioning vents, the ceiling bulges, a body disappears. Mysterious men lurk about town, wearing thick glasses and pocket protectors...
Kings of Infinite Space is a hilarious and horrifying spoof on our everyday lives and gives true voice to the old adage, "Work is Hell."
About the Author
James Hynes is the author of the novels
The Lecturer's Tale,
Wild Colonial Boy, and the stories
Publish & Perish (all New York Times Notable Books of the Year). He lives in Austin, Texas.