"In the annals of Great
American Places to get lost to find yourself — Huck’s river, Ishmael’s
sea, Dean Moriarty’s open road — space should be made for the gloriously
bombed-out punk rock scene, whether on the Lower East Side or in West
Hollywood or in Dinkytown, Minneapolis. At its best, “The Sabotage
Café” could be called urban blight pastoral…Furst is an impressively
sharp, compassionate and morally scrupulous anatomist of human relationships….
His narrator has a haunting authority." —The New York Times
Book Review
“The Sabotage Café is a
masterful book, replete with the raw, painful memories of American youth
who no longer feel any connection to the generation that raised them.” —Ad Busters
"The Sabotage Café
shows debut novelist Joshua Furst in full control of his psychologically
complex material, with a tale of 'emotional bondage' as chilling as
it is heartbreakingly real." —O, The Oprah Magazine
“Joshua Furst's debut novel
should not be missed by anyone who has an adolescent or who has been
one. . . . This book is itself a kind of brick, hurled at a Starbucks
window, but much more dangerous in the end." —Minneapolis Star-Tribune
"Unforgettable…Manages
to capture both the clear heartache of a mother whose child has left
home and the fuzzy logic of a mind misled by mental illness. Of
course it also depicts the uncontrollable rage of abandoned and runaway
youth. . . Furst writes with a diction that tugs and the heartstrings…this
work is remarkable. No reader of fiction, whether a fan of punk music
or not, should miss it." —The Washington Times
“Aaron Cometbus' Last Gasp–published
book Double Duce is probably the best novel about the ecstasy
of being a gutter punk. This debut novel by New York's Joshua Furst,
which is insider enough to name-check Cometbus, is probably the best
book about that life's agony…The author, uninterested in preaching
or shock value, finds moments of physical passion and exuberance in
this falling-down life. He puts himself into the mind of his two heroines
so well, you wonder if he has some sort of psychic television himself.”
—Metro Silicon Valley
“The Sabotage Café
is hardcore—tough, uncompromising, and utterly brilliant.” —The
Buffalo News
“The gritty world of riot,
rebellion, alienation, and despair is perfectly rendered.” —The
Boston Globe
“A harrowing account of the
way, for better and very much for worse, we cling to the notion that
we live inside our children and they live inside us.” —Jim Shepard,
author of Like You’d Understand, Anyway
“Reading a few pages of Joshua
Furst’s debut novel, The Sabotage Café, is enough to make
you fully appreciate its high-wire balancing act. As in his acclaimed
story collection Short People (2003), Furst demonstrates an uncanny
ability to understand the most wayward adolescents, acutely depicting
the downfall of Cheryl, a 15-year-old who flees the comforts of a Minneapolis
suburb for a squalid life of drugs and squats. Furst’s descriptions
of the teen’s downward spiral are so disarmingly straightforward and
unadorned by judgment that the book is at once poignant and dreamlike.”
—Time Out New York
“Julia’s struggle to do
the right thing in spite of illness and in spite of—and sometimes
with—her husband’s help is utterly captivating.” —Rocky Mountain
News
“Furst understands the frustrations
and fears of furious, confused teens; Cheryl's insecurity and moodiness
feel familiar to anyone who has ever been a teenage girl.” —Chicago
Tribune
“At once poignant and dreamlike.”
—Time Out New York
“Original. . . . [Furst]
is able to capture distraught teens and confused parents in an affecting
and unaffected way.” —Blueprint Magazine
“Helps remind us that over-the-top
emotions and continual crises are the raw reality of teenage life.”—The
Tennessean
“Julia’s journey . . .
pack[s] quite the emotional punch. Despite the layers of grime on top,
The Sabotage Café is, at its heart, a story about a family who
can’t quite communicate.”—The Daily Iowan
“Original and brilliant,
this novel once again proves Joshua Furst to be one of the finest writers
of fiction.” —Yiyun Li, author of A Thousand Years of Good Prayers