Synopses & Reviews
A long overdue retelling of
New Grub Street George Gissing's classic satire of the Victorian literary marketplace
Grub chronicles the triumphs and humiliations of a group of young novelists living in and around New York City.
Eddie Renfros, on the brink of failure after his critically acclaimed first book, wants only to publish another novel and hang on to his beautiful wife, Amanda, who has her own literary ambitions and a bit of a roving eye. Among their circle are writers of every stripe from the Machiavellian Jackson Miller to the "experimental writer" Henry who lives in squalor while seeking the perfect sentence. Amid an assortment of scheming agents, editors, and hangers-on, each writer must negotiate the often competing demands of success and integrity, all while grappling with inner demons and the stabs of professional and personal jealousy. The question that nags at them is this: What is it to write a novel in the twenty-first century?
Pointedly funny and compassionate, Grub reveals what the publishing industry does to writers and what writers do to themselves for the sake of art and to each other in the pursuit of celebrity.
Review
"Blackwell's...loose adaptation of George Gissing's New Grub Street (1891) is an entertaining exposition of the grind and toil of most day-to-day writing careers, with the faintest glimmer of the hope of finding success without having to sell out always just within reach." Library Journal
About the Author
Elise Blackwell is the author of The Unnatural History of Cypress Parish and Hunger, chosen by the Los Angeles Times as one of the best books of 2003. Her stories have appeared in Witness, Seed, Global City Review, Topic, and elsewhere. Originally from southern Louisiana, she teaches at the University of South Carolina