Description
Book SynopsisA new volume of the singular, ongoing, great American jazz novel Trade Review"A literary adventure of the highest order, a feat of prose and imagination that takes the fiction genre into new territory. Once of the most memorable meetings of prose and jazz in English literature."" -- Florence Wetzel - All About Jazz
"Singular, ongoing, great American jazz novel." -- John Madera - Big Other
"Mackey has now written close to one thousand pages of fiction about music that does not exist....What is so revolutionary about it, still, is the way Mackey makes the pain of this absence into the occasion for renewing a love of language, of redirecting our ears toward the page...[His] handling of history is subtle and immaculate." -- BOMB Magazine
"Exquisite rhythmic lyricism" -- Bookforum
"A major work of experimental and philosophical fiction....an ongoing meditation on black cultural production writ large." -- Chicago Review
"Mackey isn’t simply playing the part of a poet recounting jazz, he’s fully engaged in the creation of its written iteration, his script a study of rhythm, flow, freedom and, yes, discipline, his words as expressive and imaginative as Coltrane’s or Coleman’s most deviously-conceived notes." -- Spencer Grady - Jazzwise
"A poetic lift...wild, free-wheeling spirit..." -- Kirkus
"Through the treatment of avant-garde jazz as sonically improvised sentences, Nathaniel Mackey’s, Late Arcade, exhibits a boundless and complicated metamorphosis in which musicality becomes the very language which attempts to describe it. An eight month series of letters written by N. to a peculiar confidant known as, “The Angel of Dust,” relays the appearance of mystical, if not erotically charged, balloons, whose ability to share the subjective experiences of N.’s bandmates results in both performances and identities gaining a greater sense of cosmic locality. Instead of accepting the casual clichés which plague musical writing, Mackey adapts a set of stylistics which are uniquely his own: much like those breaths which are prodigiously pushed out of a tenor, a trumpet, or an oboe, the words read as chaotic, harmonious, suspensions of the spirit which one must hear before they may fully inhabit." -- Bennet S. Johnson - Literati Bookstore, Ann Arbor, MI
"Nathaniel Mackey is a poet of ongoingness involved in a kind of spiritualist or cosmic pursuit." -- Edward Hirsch - The Washington Post
"Our greatest living epic poet, (...) Mackey’s poetry and criticism (...) have reinvented modernism for our time." -- Literary Hub