Synopses & Reviews
There seems to be no shortage of business at the Tank, a high-profile firm in Copenhagen. There are meetings to attend, memos to write, colleagues to undermine. But when the Tank's nefarious CEO announces a round of downsizing, everyone becomes exponentially more concerned about ... whatever it is they're doing. Not since Joshua Ferris's Then We Came to the End has there been such a savvy satire of contemporary work culture, and the distorting effects it can have on our lives. Following these imperiled company men and women out into the autumn days and nights of Copenhagen, Thomas E. Kennedy traces the ripple effects of the news at the Tank as it impacts spouses, children, and lovers. Top executive Frederick Breathwaite is frantically trying to ensure a stable future for his son, while the boy's greatest fear is that his future might resemble his father's absurd present. Harald Jaeger is estranged from his wife and daughters but pursuing desperate passions for other women (including the Tank's married CFO). And while he's lost in amorous fantasies, he has managed to catch the CEO's eye-as a possible replacement for Breathwaite. Sharp, funny, but remarkably tender, Falling Sideways is the second book in Kennedy's virtuoso Copenhagen Quartet, and a book that will continue to build his reputation as one of America's most versatile literary novelists.
Review
“
Falling Sideways is that rarest of commodities in American literary fiction, a novel about men and women at work; it is part satire and part drama, and it is very smart.” —
Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post “This second book in [Kennedy's] Copenhagen Quartet is probably... his most accessible... A clever spoof about work and the relationships formed there.”
—Kirkus Reviews “Balanced and true observations... [Kennedy] has an ear and eye for modern life.”
—Minneapolis Star-Tribune "Thomas Kennedys beautifully written novel... asks the question of what exactly happens when comfort is replaced by confrontation, security by the scrambling for survival."
—Post and Courier (Charleston, SC)“Thomas E. Kennedy is an astonishment.” —Junot Díaz, author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao"No one writes about the loves and lives of men better than Kennedy." —Kansas City Star
Synopsis
The Tank, a high-profile Danish firm, is down-sizing. Frederick Breathwaite, a well-positioned American in the firm, sees the axe about to fall, and is desperately trying to cut his losses. Meanwhile, his colleague Harald is too distracted by various womenincluding the Tank's married CFOto notice the impending doom, or the potential loss of his daughters to his disgruntled ex. While Frederick frets over his finances, his 21-year-old son has quit school to assist an Afghani shoemaker in the city's slums. But the Breathwaite boy has also caught the eye of Adam Kampmanthe teenage son of Frederick's unscrupulous new boss. And while the fathers are frantic about their sons' futures, the boys live in fear that their futures will look like their fathers'. As the autumn days of Copenhagen grow shorter and heads roll through the Tank's corporate hallways, a diverse cast of managers and underlings, spouses, lovers and children will all face reckonings economic, emotional, and existential. Thomas E. Kennedy shows his remarkable range with Falling Sideways, a smart and tender satire of middle age and modern life.
Synopsis
There seems to be no shortage of business at the Tank, a high-profile firm in Copenhagen. There are meetings to attend, memos to write, colleagues to undermine. But when the Tank's nefarious CEO announces a round of downsizing, everyone becomes exponentially more concerned about … whatever it is they're doing. Not since Joshua Ferris's
Then We Came to the End has there been such a savvy satire of contemporary work culture, and the distorting effects it can have on our lives.
Following these imperiled company men and women out into the autumn days and nights of Copenhagen, Thomas E. Kennedy traces the ripple effects of the news at the Tank as it impacts spouses, children, and lovers. Top executive Frederick Breathwaite is frantically trying to ensure a stable future for his son, while the boy's greatest fear is that his future might resemble his father's absurd present. Harald Jaeger is estranged from his wife and daughters but pursuing desperate passions for other women (including the Tank's married CFO). And while he's lost in amorous fantasies, he has managed to catch the CEO's eye-as a possible replacement for Breathwaite.
Sharp, funny, but remarkably tender, Falling Sideways is the second book in Kennedy's virtuoso Copenhagen Quartet, and a book that will continue to build his reputation as one of America's most versatile literary novelists.
Synopsis
There seems to be no shortage of business at the Tank, a high-profile firm in Copenhagen. There are meetings to attend, memos to write, colleagues to undermine. But when the Tank's nefarious CEO announces a round of downsizing, everyone becomes exponentially more concerned about … whatever it is they're doing. Not since Joshua Ferris's Then We Came to the End has there been such a savvy satire of contemporary work culture, and the distorting effects it can have on our lives.
Following these imperiled company men and women out into the autumn days and nights of Copenhagen, Thomas E. Kennedy traces the ripple effects of the news at the Tank as it impacts spouses, children, and lovers. Top executive Frederick Breathwaite is frantically trying to ensure a stable future for his son, while the boy's greatest fear is that his future might resemble his father's absurd present. Harald Jaeger is estranged from his wife and daughters but pursuing desperate passions for other women (including the Tank's married CFO). And while he's lost in amorous fantasies, he has managed to catch the CEO's eye-as a possible replacement for Breathwaite.
Sharp, funny, but remarkably tender, Falling Sideways is the second book in Kennedy's virtuoso Copenhagen Quartet, and a book that will continue to build his reputation as one of America's most versatile literary novelists.
Synopsis
By the author of the acclaimed In the Company of Angels, a rollicking, cross-generational satire of work, love, and family, grounded in the rubble of a downsizing company.
Synopsis
By the author of the acclaimed In the Company of Angels, a rollicking, cross-generational satire of work, love, and family, grounded in the rubble of a downsizing company.
About the Author
Thomas E. Kennedy's books include novels, story and essay collections, literary criticism, translation, and anthologies. His essays won a National Magazine Award in 2008, and his fiction has been awarded several other prizes. He teaches at the Fairleigh Dickinson University MFA program. Born and raised in New York, Kennedy currently lives in Copenhagen with his two children. His Web site is www.thomasekennedy.com