“With verve and finesse, A Dictionary of Modern Consternation reimagines the hybrid, using form to probe the essential paradox of language: how can something so unstable create the conditions for confinement? Part Lydia Davis, part Jenny Boully, and all the way himself, Brook McClurg invites us into the space between distance and intimacy, bone and blood, rock and sky, cracking open the field of the page and giving us a place to wander and transform.”
—Paul Lisicky, author of Later: My Life at the Edge of the World
“A moving memoir that goes far in helping readers make sense of the current period we are living in and brilliantly demonstrates a desire to place some order around a chaotic world.”
—Daryl Farmer, author of Where We Land
“I love it. No other book speaks to our current paradoxical predicament with such an inventive and generous voice. McClurg articulates in neon bright that the promise of authentic joy in our digital, corporate, bureaucratic world has not an ounce of authenticity about it. By undergirding zinging definitions with the story of how he and his partner try to build a real life, McClurg makes us consider the dizzyingly absurd, and, with sheer thoughtfulness and bountiful humor, he steadies us, one letter of the alphabet at a time.”
—Nicole Walker, author of The After-Normal and Quench Your Thirst with Salt and coeditor of Bending Genre