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I Am Radar by Reif Larsen
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I Am Radar

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I Am Radar by Reif Larsen
Paperback $18.00
Mar 29, 2016 | ISBN 9780143107910

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  • $18.00

    Mar 29, 2016 | ISBN 9780143107910

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  • Feb 24, 2015 | ISBN 9780698168848

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Praise

The Los Angeles Times: 
[B]ig, beautiful, ambitious… Radical physicist puppeteers? It takes narrative magic to pull off such a loopy combination, and luckily, Reif Larsen has it to spare. His prose is addictive and enchanting… It’s a worthy endeavor that Larsen, who could apply his gorgeous prose to more comfortable literary fictions, is engaging with distant and unfamiliar cultures… the book is striving for something stronger, and Larsen’s ceaselessly lovely prose is matched by his many ambitions.”

The Washington Post
“The promise shown in [Larsen’s] first novel is more than fulfilled in the grandly ambitious I AM RADAR, another masterpiece of geekhood…If Larsen’s debut looked like a Donald Barthelme assemblage, this one resembles something by Thomas Pynchon…Larsen’s brainy book is no ephemeral performance piece. He grapples with time-honored questions of free will, predestination, man vs. nature and the tensions between parents and children. But it’s the ingenuity with which he does so, rather than the themes themselves, that elicits admiration…I AM RADAR is a dazzling performance.”

The New York Times Book Review: 
“Set aside for the moment the black baby born to white parents, the avant-garde puppeteers and the quantum physics that swirl around the whole kit and caboodle. The most interesting fact of Reif Larsen’s 600-plus-page novel, I Am Radar, is that it reads lke something far more compact that its bulk might suggest. There are maps, diagrams and pictures (e.g., an elephant plummeting from a bridge, a Cambodian prisoner of the Khmer Rouge) that remind one of the visual arrangements in W.G. Sebald’s novels. There there is a deeply patterened narrative that darts easily from small-bore domestic dramas to sweeping historical catastrophes with just the right fillip of silliness and levity to keep the whole text eminently approachable… I Am Radar is as easy to enjoy for its swaggering tragicomic spirit as it is to admire for its celestrial ambition.”
 
Boston Globe: 
Chameleonic, ambitious, epic, fantastical, whimsical, thought-provoking, arcane, philosophical, exhaustive, and completely bonkers… It’s an estimable, and completely insane idea that has all the hallmarks of a film by Michel Gondry or Jean-Pierre Jeunet, who incidentally also directed the equally dazzling movie adaptation of T.S. Spivet… Larsen’s fare is unquestionably one of the more adventurous entries into the literary landscape, and his skill and flair for quirky, innovative works that cross over into the historical and the literary will always have an admiring… audience. It’s a performance, that’s for sure, and Larsen is a keen player.”


Cleveland Plain-Dealer
Larsen’s is an extraordinarily lush and verdant imagination, blooming wildly on the borders of the absurd and the riotous, the surreal and the ordinary…Quite unlike any [novel] I’ve read in a long time. One doesn’t consume it; one enters it, as part of a literary enactmentBrilliant…The effort is well-rewarded: It is both maddening and marvelous…I can’t wait to see what he pulls off next.”

Shelf Awareness: 
A story of Homeric proportions… It’s a wild ride with an unconventional structure and enormous cast of unforgettable characters. Larsen’s prose is straightforward and bold, full of sparkling phrases… Wise yet unpretentious, both broad and deep, I Am Radar will slake the most unquenchable thirst for storytelling and open the reader’s eyes to new possibilities in fiction.” 

The A.V. Club: 
[S]prawling, epic… the result is impressive and a little bit wondrous. In a way, the reader becomes part of the story, becoming aware of the observer’s affect on the observed… It’s an astonishing conceit.”

Flavorwire: 
“Large, robust, even intimidating: I Am Radar is never a laborious read. Sentence to sentence, the reader will find small gems (“How intimate, to trace a person’s geography”) and beautiful descriptions of typically ugly places… an intelligent and engaging book.”

Time Out New York: 
One of our most highly anticipated novels of the year, I Am Radar is an epic about Radar Radmanovic and his inexplicable link to past and present wars and sieges from the Congo to Yugoslavia…Genre-defying.”

Vanity Fair: 
[I Am Radar] moves beyond the limits of reality.”

GOOP.com: 
“[An] ambitious and otherworldly tale.”

Dallas Morning News: 
“In the spirit of Thomas Pynchon’s V. and David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas, Reif Larsen’s second novel, I Am Radar, is more akin to an intellectual curiosity shop than a traditional novel. It’s an achievement of the imagination, peopled by characters who bear more resemblance to ideas than human beings, set on a global stage that spans both time and place from the 1940s to the present, via Norway, Cambodia, Bosnia and New Jersey.”

Publishers Weekly (starred review): 
Gripping… Masterly…This is a sprawling, engrossing novel about the ravages of war and the triumph of art. Larsen is an effortless magician, and his performance here is a pure delight.”

Library Journal (starred review): 
“A delightfully disorienting and immersive experience.”

Kirkus: 
“Strange things happen when Radar Radmanovic is around… If Larsen’s story makes demands of its readers, it also offers plenty of rewards. Imaginative, original, nicely surreal.”

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