Synopses & Reviews
"I was drawn to Michael Jeffrey Lee's line-up of loners and drifters, imperiled children, and haunted psychos neither because I want to hang out with these bad boys, nor because I plan to cross the street when I see them coming, but because the invitation to inhabit their minds, to see the world through their eyes, and to watch their often unsettling stories play out in space and time enables Lee to do all sorts of extremely interesting things with consciousness and language."Francine Prose, judge for the Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction
Michael Jeffrey Lee's stories are bizarre and smart and stilted, like dystopic fables told by a redneck Samuel Beckett. Outcasts hunker under bridges, or hole up in bars, waiting for the hurricane to hit. Lee's forests are full of menace too-unseen crowds gather at the tree-line, and bands of petty crooks and marauders bluster their way into suicidal games of one-upmanship. In Something In My Eye, violence and idleness are always in tension, ratcheting up and down with an eerie and effortless force. Diction leaps between registers with the same vertiginous swoops, moving from courtly formality to the funk and texture of a slang that is all the characters' own. It's a masterful performance, and Lee's inventiveness accomplishes that very rare feat-hyper-stylized structure and language that achieve clarity out of turbulence, never allowing technique to obscure what's most important: a direct address that makes visible all those we'd rather not see.
Michael Jeffrey Lee lives in New Orleans, Louisiana, where he earns his living as a typist, waiter, and nightclub singer. A frequent contributor to Conjunctions, he is also an associate fiction editor at the New Orleans Review. He is at work on a novel.
Review
I was drawn to Michael Jeffrey Lees line-up of loners and drifters, imperiled children and haunted psychos neither because I want to hang out with these bad boys, nor because I plan to cross the street when I see them coming, but because the invitation to inhabit their minds, to see the world through their eyes, and to watch their often unsettling stories play out in space and time enables Lee to do all sorts of extremely interesting things with consciousness and language.”
Francine Prose
I am scared by these stories. But, as Jean Cocteaus Belle tells her Beast, Jaime avoir peur. I like to be scared. These dark and beautiful tales offer a terrible thrill, a creepy adventure into the land of fairy-tale madmen. In Lees world, theyre just some bummed out regular guys, rendered in the most mealy and exquisite prose. I like to be scared by them, by this talent.
Kate Bernheimer
"Relevant, startling and irresistible, Michael Lee's own unique brand of black humor makes for an extraordinary experience."
Rikki Ducornet
Review
"Ten of the 15 stories in this collection were previously published in literary journals and anthologies. Lees stories are intriguing and highly original, with a bent toward the weird, both in character and worldview. He is a master of voice, portraying the lives of men who are lost, lonely, and disturbed. He also has a penchant for the telling phrase. This line from the title story gives a taste of the narrators despair: 'I came from a place of no history to a place where history has no place for me.' His stories display the kind of humor that produces laughs and guilt at the same time. Lees chosen techniques are often brilliant. For the story 'Contemporary Country Music,' about a war veterans first night home from the war, Lee uses five voices, but all the narration is in the second person, and the result is a tour de force of short fiction writing. The work of a promising author worth watching, this collection belongs in any library with a short-fiction readership."
Ellen Loughran, Booklist
Reading Lees debut collection feels a bit like watching a black-and-white film by Jim Jarmusch. In both cases, down-and-out characters with odd, off-kilter ways of verbalizing their experience are filtered through the lens of a narrator/director who could very well have something in his eye.”
Sue Russell, Library Journal
The range of genres is wide, with satires of country music lyrics, Kafkaesque parables about the anxiety of the living to avoid death, and a disturbing dialogue between a murderer in hell and his victim in heaven. . . . Lee is very successful in creating a dream-like, emotionally disconnected state throughout, with intentionally stilted dialogue and plots that tend to revolve around forms of symbolic gestures, physical violence, or sexual deviance.”
Publishers Weekly
Lee also utilizes a variety of structures that, once encountered, you cant imagine the story told any other way.”
S. Hope Mills, ForeWord Reviews
I was drawn to Michael Jeffrey Lees line-up of loners and drifters, imperiled children and haunted psychos neither because I want to hang out with these bad boys, nor because I plan to cross the street when I see them coming, but because the invitation to inhabit their minds, to see the world through their eyes, and to watch their often unsettling stories play out in space and time enables Lee to do all sorts of extremely interesting things with consciousness and language.”
Francine Prose
I am scared by these stories. But, as Jean Cocteaus Belle tells her Beast, Jaime avoir peur. I like to be scared. These dark and beautiful tales offer a terrible thrill, a creepy adventure into the land of fairy-tale madmen. In Lees world, theyre just some bummed out regular guys, rendered in the most mealy and exquisite prose. I like to be scared by them, by this talent.
Kate Bernheimer
"Relevant, startling and irresistible, Michael Lee's own unique brand of black humor makes for an extraordinary experience."
Rikki Ducornet
Synopsis
Michael J. Lee writes like a redneck Samuel Beckett, sketching dystopias of life along the margins in contemporary New Orleans.
Synopsis
"I was drawn to Michael Jeffrey Lee's line-up of loners and drifters, imperiled children, and haunted psychos neither because I want to hang out with these bad boys, nor because I plan to cross the street when I see them coming, but because the invitation to inhabit their minds, to see the world through their eyes, and to watch their often unsettling stories play out in space and time enables Lee to do all sorts of extremely interesting things with consciousness and language."Francine Prose, judge for the Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction
These are hyper-stylized fables of exilesunder bridges, holed up in bars before the hurricane hits, and cast among the uncomprehending innocent. Linking back to an eighteenth century grammar of predestination and forward to a twenty-first century resignation to forces beyond our understanding, Something in My Eye makes visible those we'd rather not see, according them all the tenderness the world withholds. Winner of the Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction.
Michael Jeffrey Lee lives in New Orleans, Louisiana, where he earns his living as a typist, waiter, and nightclub singer. A frequent contributor to Conjunctions, he is also an associate fiction editor at the New Orleans Review. He is at work on a novel.
About the Author
Michael J. Lee: Michael J. Lee lives in New Orleans, Louisiana, where he earns his living as a typist, a waiter, and a nightclub singer. A frequent contributor to
Conjunctions, he is also an Associate Fiction Editor at the
New Orleans Review. He is at work on a novel.