To Rise Again at a Decent Hour
- Published: 19 June 2014
- ISBN: 9780141955919
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 320
Funny, thought-provoking, and touching. One hesitates to call it the CATCH-22 of dentistry, but it's sort of in that ballpark. Some books simply carry you along on the strength and energy of the author's invention and unique view of the world. This is one of those books
Stephen King
Smart, sad, hilarious and eloquent . . . a writer at the top of his game and surpassing the promise of his celebrated debut
Kirkus
This is one of the funniest, saddest, sweetest novels I've read since Then We Came to the End. When historians try to understand our strange, contradictory era, they would be wise to consult To Rise Again at a Decent Hour. It captures what it is to be alive in early 21st-century America like nothing else I've read
Anthony Marra
Very funny [and] highly entertaining . . . Josh Ferris is a gifted satirist and very much in touch with the fear and paranoia that undercut US society
Irish Times
Joshua Ferris has proved his astonishing ability to spin gold from ordinary air . . . As brave and adept as any writer out there
New York Times Book Review
Geek-smart prose and wry humour . . . hilarious
Economist
Genuine, funny, tragic and never dull. It'll also leave you flossing with a vengeance
It's a pleasure watching this young writer confidently range from the registers of broad punchline comedy to genuine spiritual depth . . . There's a happy side effect to reading the novel, as well: If you're a backslider like I was, it will guilt you into flossing again
Wall Street Journal
An engrossing and hilariously bleak novel about a dentist being shook out of his comfortable atheism . . . This splintering of the self hasn't been performed in fiction so neatly since Philip Roth's "Operation Shylock'
Boston Globe
Ferris [is] a Virgil of the disaffected . . . This is the novel's peculiar brilliance, to uncover its existential stakes in the most mundane tasks
LA Times
Laugh-out-loud hilarious, combining Woody Allen's New York nihilism with an Ivy League vocabulary
Booklist
Returns Ferris to the comedy of the workplace . . . his writing is so fresh and modern - a comedian's sense of timing mixed with a social critic's knack for shaking the bushes
Interview Magazine
Funny and surprisingly moving
Glamour
It is completely wonderful . . . Good god he is talented
Sarah Jessica Parker
Enormously impressive: profoundly and humanely engaged with the mysteries of belief and disbelief . . . dismayingly funny in the way that only really serious books can be
Guardian
Brilliant . . . witty . . . passages of flashing comedy that sound like a stand-up theologian suffering a nervous breakdown
Washington Post
Joshua Ferris excels at mordantly comic novels about ordinary people in crisis . . . he writes with brio about the modern condition
Metro
Compelling but never cheap, inventive but never obscure . . . Ferris has secured his status as exactly the sort of mainstream literary novelist American fiction needs
Independent on Sunday
A hoot . . . There's a tincture of Pynchonian paranoia à la The Crying of Lot 49 here, and a dash, too, of the kitchen-sink comic winsomeness that the Dave Eggers generation brought to US literary fiction
FT
Glorious . . . A very, very funny novel. If misanthropy's going to come from anywhere it's from a lifetime's confrontation with halitosis
BBC Radio 4 Saturday Review
This is fierce, pithy, unforgiving satire, taking a sledgehammer to all-American cracker-barrel homeliness. Its comic energy is fuelled by disgust and exasperation, in the tradition of Roth and Heller and John Kennedy O'Toole. But Ferris is also a dab hand at more delicate humour, every bit as contemporary . . . Ferris is very funny . . . His voice is unique
Craig Brown, Mail on Sunday
Joshua Ferris has been heralded as one of America's sharpest observers of 21st-century life and, reading his third novel, it's easy to see why. To Rise Again At A Decent Hour has the immediacy and the trenchant satire of a brilliant stand-up routine as well as the big ideas and the in-depth research of a brilliant academic paper
Express
To Rise Again at a Decent Hour is a funny novel, by turns ha-ha, peculiar and, like O'Rourke himself, suspended between heaven and earth
Independent