Richard Kalich | |
---|---|
Born | New York City, U.S. |
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | American |
Period | 1987–present |
Genre | Absurdist fiction, Postmodern fiction |
Literary movement | Postmodernism |
Relatives | Robert Kalich |
Website | |
richardkalich |
Richard Kalich, the author of The Nihilesthete (1987), Penthouse F (2010) and Charlie P (2005) published in 2014 in a single volume as Central Park West Trilogy, The Zoo (2001) and The Assisted Living Facility Library (2019). He has been nominated for the National Book Award and for a Pulitzer Prize.[1] His novels are internationally acclaimed and widely translated: his novels have been published in Bulgaria, Denmark, England, Germany, Israel, the Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, Turkey, and Japan. Kalich was born and lives in New York City where he co-directs a film company[2] with his twin brother, Robert Kalich.
Works
Central Park West Trilogy
Central Park West Trilogy includes three novels, The Nihilesthete, Penthouse F and Charlie P., originally published separately and collected for the first time in a single volume by the European publisher Betimes Books.
The Nihilesthete
The Nihilesthete, first published in 1987 in US by The Permanent Press, and in 1989. in the UK under the title The Cry of the Cat[3] by Marion Boyars Publishing, was selected by The Philadelphia Inquirer as one of the most noteworthy books of the year and heralded by the San Francisco Chronicle as "one of the most powerfully written books of the decade".[4] It was nominated for a PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award, a National Book Award, and Pulitzer Prize.[1] A social caseworker Haberman becomes obsessed with one of his wards, Brodski, a quadriplegic with "a cri du chat" syndrome, when he discovers that "the idiot" is actually an esthete and an artist. Haberman, probably a failed artist himself, first makes it his mission to help Brodski realize his ambition, then driven by jealousy, starts probing the depths of his ward's creative determination.
Penthouse F
Penthouse F, first published in 2010 by Green Integer, is a meta-fictional novel in the form of an inquiry into the death of a young boy and girl in the Manhattan penthouse of a writer named Richard Kalich. Suicide or murder? The reader is the jury as the fictional Kalich's own personal documents, and notes on a novel in progress are presented as well as the interview transcripts between "The Investigator," Kalich the Protagonist, and his acquaintances. Kalich the Author blurs the lines between reality and fantasy, making the reader create his own reality and—maybe—discover the truth.
Charlie P
Charlie P was first published in 2005 by Green Integer.
Charlie P, the main character of this absurd, hopeless, funny, and terrifying novel, decides, at age three, when his father dies, to overcome mortality by becoming immortal: by not living his life, he will live forever. From then on, his whole life and his tragi-comic misadventures happen only in his mind.
The Zoo
Published in 2001 by Publish America, The Zoo is a darkly comic allegory in which Wise Old Owl attempt to "animalize" Animal World. With the help of Muerte Buzzard, Sly fox, Michael Ferret, and the like, Wise Old Owl builds a zoo to 'zoo-in' animals deemed responsible for the sorry state of the world: first, those animals who look different, then artists, thinkers and other dangerous animals who dare having an inner life. As in our human world, some of the more courageous rebel.
The Assisted Living Facility Library
Published in 2019 by Betimes Books, Ireland. This metafictional novel a meditation on life and art, and the sacrifice of one to the other.
Writing
Kalich is considered to be a postmodernist and absurdist. In his works he often criticizes voyeuristic digital culture and laments the loss of literary culture, loss of self and the identity. Other recurrent themes in Kalich's works are absurdity, cruelty and sadism, obsession, surveillance, spiritual diminishment, powerlessness, and manipulation.[5] He is influenced by and compared to Franz Kafka,[6] Samuel Beckett, Witold Gombrowicz, Albert Camus, Mark Danielewski,[7] Georges Bataille,[8] Ken Kesey and Paul Auster.[9]
Reception
About his writing
"Richard Kalich is a successful novelist, one who has succeeded in consistently producing perplexing fictions that fail to categorize themselves and escape the warping influence of authorial intent."[9] Christopher Leise, Electronic Book Review
"He's after what it means to be profoundly out of step with one's culture yet still unwilling to let go of the American dream."[10] Brian Evenson
"Kalich represents the best in contemporary fiction. He has every chance to become- why not? - a living classical author."[11] Hooligan Literary Magazine, Moscow
"Speaks with a singular honesty, power and eloquence about our spiritually diminished modern world."[12] Mid-American Review
About The Nihilesthete
"One of the most powerfully written books of the decade." San Francisco Chronicle
"A brilliant, hammer-hitting, lights-out novel."[13] Los Angeles Times
"As important and original a novel to have been written by an American author in a generation."[12] Mid-American Review
"A major American writer."[14] Carlin Romano, Philadelphia Inquirer
"Remarkable . . . the aesthetic effect is a bit like having the wind knocked out of you."[14] Richard Fuller
About Penthouse F
"This is an important work that deserves to be read by everyone interested in serious fiction."[15] Marc Lowe, Review of Contemporary Fiction
"[Penthouse F] is akin to the best work of Paul Auster in terms of its readability without sacrificing its intelligence of experiment. […] Kalich delivers afresh, relevant, and enticingly readable work of metafiction."[16] American Book Review
"Thrilling and confusing in equal measure, Penthouse F is an important book that dismantles the reader, leaving you in fragmented bits and pieces like the barbed clips that make up the novel’s structure."[5] Colin Herd, 3:AM Magazine
"Ghosts haunt this book from the first page to last: Dostoevsky, Mallarme, Kafka, Mann, Camus, Pessoa, Gombrowicz--and, oh yes, most perniciously of all, "Kalich." For he is a man who tortures himself both with the novels he has written and with those he has not. Let us forgive him even if he will not forgive himself, recognizing as we do the one truth of this tale that seems to be beyond doubt: "It was all in his head like everything else about him."[8] Warren Motte, World Literature Today
"A marvelous book. It manages to do in a short novel what the great postmodernists like Coover and Barth take five or six hundred pages to do."[17] Brian Evenson
"If one of the great European intransigents of the last century - say, Franz Kafka or Georges Bataille or Witold Gombrowicz - were around to write a novel about our era of reality TV and the precession of simulacra, the era of Big Brother and The Real World, what would it look like? Well, it might look like Richard Kalich’s Penthouse F."[7] Brian McHale
"In the strange, sometimes frank ways that Robbe-Grillet and Cooper and Acker approach a kind of lurking moral presence in their work, Kalich too creates something somehow both spiritually clouded and passively demanding: what is going on here, in this business of words, and people? The answer, perhaps both political and existential, whether you agree with one side or the other, operates in the way texts I most often enjoy to get wrapped up in invoke: a door that once opened, is opened, and you can’t get it all the way back shut, try how you must. This is a book, a body of work, an author, deserving a new unearthing eye."[18] Blake Butler, HTML Giant
About Charlie P
"Charlie P is energetic, delightfully sardonic, dark without being oppressive, playful and very readable. Richard Kalich has hit a voice that commands attention and allows the reader to endlessly and wittily process cultural hyperbole and inflated newspeak. Charlie P is the urban everyman, the self-regarding and coreless creature of our times. Kalich has captured him through endless reflections down the tunnel of the facing mirrors. One reads and reads and smiles. Charlie P captures the note of our late modern times."[19] Sven Birkerts
"With his continuous comic exaggeration, Kalich is able to describe, highly uniquely, the overwhelming, vertiginous, risky sensation of being alive."[20] American Book Review
"Like most good comic novelists, Kalich is adept at teetering on the precipice wherein he might decide to dilute the fun with the grim, creating that suspense where things might get really bad at any moment."[21] Rain Taxi Review of Books
"[Kalich is] after what it means to be profoundly out of step with one’s culture yet still unwilling to let go of the American dream. And this tension between dream and reality makes Charlie P a deliciously painful book."[10] Bookforum
"I would rather that the familiar be embraced and the novel resonates beyond itself and intone the spheres of Plato and Beckett. Charlie P resonates."[22] Review of Contemporary Fiction
About The Zoo
"The Zoo starts where Animal Farm leaves off."[23] - Velon Shuzkeil
"Kalich has written the definitive novel on the stupidity of intolerance"[23] - Marion Boyars
Nominations and awards
Year | Award | Work | Nominee/Winner |
---|---|---|---|
1987 | New American Writing Award[24] | The Nihilesthete | Winner |
1988 | Pulitzer Prize[25] | The Nihilesthete | Nomination |
1987 | PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction | The Nihilesthete | Finalist |
1987 | Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award | The Nihilesthete | Nomination |
1987 | National Book Award | The Nihilesthete | Nomination |
1987 | One of Carlin Romanos "Most Noteworthy" novels of 1987.[14] | The Nihilesthete | Winner |
1987 | Representative of US titles at the Frankfurt Book Fair[26] | The Nihilesthete | Winner |
References
- 1 2 "I'm a Writer - and So is My Identical Twin". HuffPost. 17 April 2012.
- ↑ "Kalich Film Properties".
- ↑ "Trove".
- ↑ The Cry of the Cat by Richard Kalich. Marion Boyars Publishers LTD. 1989. ISBN 9780714528922.
- 1 2 "Watcher, Manipulator -". 23 March 2011.
- ↑ Motte, Warren. "Book Review of Richard Kalich’s novel: Penthouse-F." World Literature Today 85:2 (March–April 2011): 61-62. Print.
- 1 2 "Zoran rosko vacuum player: Richard Kalich – Philosophical sadism: He loses his penis, is completely dismembered, suffocated, starved and cut in half, yet continues to come back". 9 August 2010.
- 1 2 Richard Kalich, Penthouse F, World Literature Today 85.2 (2011): 61-62.
- 1 2 "How to Fail (at) Fiction and Influence Everybody: A Review of Penthouse-F by Richard Kalich - Christopher Leise". www.electronicbookreview.com. Archived from the original on 14 January 2012.
- 1 2 Brian Evenson on RICHARD KALICH’S Charlie P. Bookforum. FEB/MAR 2006.
- ↑ Charlie P. //Hooligan Literary Magazine. January 2005. No. 1 (34)
- 1 2 Kalich, Richard The Nihilesthete Reviewed by Paul Jablon v vIII, no. 1, Mid-American Review
- ↑ "Archives". Los Angeles Times. 5 July 1987.
- 1 2 3 "Register". Articles.philly.com. 13 December 1987. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
- ↑ "Press Reference".
- ↑ Dodge, Trevor (2013). "Metamurder". American Book Review. 34 (2): 15. doi:10.1353/abr.2013.0008. S2CID 246063067.
- ↑ "Penthouse F - Richard Kalich : Small Press Distribution". www.spdbooks.org. Archived from the original on 15 December 2010.
- ↑ "Richard Kalich's Penthouse F | HTMLGIANT".
- ↑ "Richard Kalich's Books - Charlie P".
- ↑ Stacey Levine reviews Richard Kalich’s Charlie P. American Book Review, Volume 27, No. 5. July/August 2006. URL: http://americanbookreview.org/issueContent.asp?id=7
- ↑ "Vol. 11, No.1, Spring 2006 (#41)". 3 February 2006.
- ↑ Gerdes, Eckhard. Richard Kalich. Charlie P. (Book review). Review of Contemporary Fiction, Spring 2006. URL: http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/64990928?q=+&versionId=78093524
- 1 2 "Richard "Dick" Kalich, Novelist".
- ↑ "The Nihilesthete". thepermanentpress.com. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.
- ↑ "Richard Kalich". huffingtonpost.com. Archived from the original on 24 April 2012.
- ↑ Strasser, Karl-Heinz. Who's who on Frankfurt Book Fair,1987.: An International Publisher's Guide. K. G. Saur Verlag GmbH, 1987.