Torture the Artist
Joey Goebel
language
(MP Publishing Limited, April 12, 2012)
Vincent Spinetti is the archetypal tortured artistâa sensitive young writer who suffers from alienation, parental neglect, poverty, depression, alcoholism, illness, nervous breakdowns, and unrequited love. However, he is unaware that these torments are due to the secret manipulations of New Renaissance, an experimental organization that hopes to improve mindless main-stream culture by raising writers who emphasize artistic quality over commerce. New Renaissance hires ex-musician Harlan Eiffler to manipulate its most promising prodigy, Vincent. Wickedly antisocial and disgusted by what passes for entertainment in the twenty-first century, Harlan ensures that Vincent remains a true artist. He poses as Vincentâs manager and nurtures his career, all the while continuing to torture him.Smart, funny, and poignant, Torture the Artist examines the timeless idea that true art can only result from suffering. âIf you could bottle Joey Goebel's imagination and sell it by the glass, we'd all be in rehab. Torture the Artist â which addresses the premise that art, like grapes in a wine press, can be squeezed out of an artist by various torments â is as full of surprises as a brand new vintage, and Joey Goebel is the wunderkind of contemporary American fiction.â â Ed McClanahan, author of The Natural Man and FamousPeople I Have KnownâIn Torture the Artist, Joey Goebel performs a mad exorcism on the society of the spectacle, unearthing the secrets of the American dream, doing it with the inventiveness of a twenty-first-century Mark Twain fueled by love and sorrow.âPeter Plate, author of Fogtown and Police and ThievesâWickedly ingeniousâŚGoebel's ebulliently funny writing sparkles off the page. He's created a whole, living, breathing world, filled with vividly sympathetic souls, and deliciously evil onesâŚone of the most interesting and engaging books I've read in a while, a smart, witty, deeply moving parable about the things we do for art -- and for love.âCaroline Leavitt, Boston GlobeâSo as Fitzgerald tagged his generationâs excesses and delusions in The Great Gatsby and Bret Easton Ellis did the same in the 1980s with Less Than Zero, Goebel grabs the Zeitgeist by the nape of the neck and gives it a good twirl in Torture the ArtistâŚhilarious, anarchic, and â this is no faint praise â adolescent.âPages MagazineââŚlively new novelâŚ[with] well-drawn characters and smooth, highly readable prose.ââBaltimore City PaperâSurprisingly funny, anything-but-predictable storyâŚThis novel, a pointed commentary on the media machine that continuously grinds away at our culture, is by turns hilarious, thought-provoking, chilling, and sad. Goebel (The Anomolies) is a quirky, fresh, and relevant voice for our time.âLibrary Journal STARRED reviewââŚa trip down the dark side of creativityâŚ[Goebel] is one of the fresh young voices in contemporary fiction. Although heâs only 24, his writing and perceptiveness is that of a more seasoned writer. Keep an eye on this talented author.âKentucky MonthlyâIf Franz Kafka had lived into the 21st century and were as funny as Jon Stewart, he might have written a novel something like Torture the ArtistâŚ[with] wonderfully funny dialogue and observations, written in flawlessly crafted sentences that make you want to phone up like-minded friends and say, âListen to this. Have you ever heard anything more perfect?ââCourier-JournalâGoebel takes his strange characters on Mr. Toad's Wild Ride, through a world filled with a strange brew of cynicism, satire, humor and real affection, a bizarre combination of imagination, artifice and insanity.âCurledup.comâTorture The Artist is a great piece of writing that will stick with you long after the last page is turned⌠another great book from this young author. And I can hope that we have more like this in the future from GoebelâŚno one is really writing stories like he is.âIndieworkshop.com