by Paula Bomer
An Untalented Mr. Ripley, a Dumb American Psycho: A young man combines boundless self-confidence with perpetual failure and ineptitude as he tries to manipulate his way into a better life, preying on women in New York City in the early '90s.
Robert Doughten Savile, aka "Doughty," is the son of a once-wealthy, now hard-up family from Darien, Connecticut. Doughty lives in a perpetual cloud of delusion, convinced of his own genius and status. While he has little capacity to accurately assess his own abilities or prospects, he cruises through life on the sheer force of his own sense of entitlement, dropping out of college and landing in the early '90s in New York City, a place brimming with both prosperity and desperation.
He cons his way from a bed at the YMCA into the posh Soho loft of a middle-aged book editor, while pursuing a young bartender, whom he also abuses and gaslights. He spins elaborate tales about his imaginary high-power job in real estate while, in reality, he passes his days watching comedy specials on VHS, smoking crack in Tompkins Square Park, and engaging in occasional sex work in the restrooms of Grand Central Station. His many failures, however, only serve to sharpen his one true gift: Doughty is a skilled predator, and the damage he inflicts on the women around him is real and remorseless. As shocking as it is illuminating, The Stalker confirms Paula Bomer as a contemporary master of the pitch-black comic novel.
"Bomer tracks the increasingly threatening behavior of a sociopath in her excellent and shocking latest ... As Doughty insinuates his way into the lives and homes of [two] women, the novel enters into genuinely disturbing territory. Bomer is equally adept at rendering Doughty's warped psychology as she is with injecting dark humor into the proceedings ... This is dark and twisted fun." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Unsettling ... A compelling character study. Bomer has created an antagonist who is a unique blend of an even more troubled Holden Caulfield mixed with a less appealing Patrick Bateman. Readers' desire for Doughty to receive karmic retribution will propel them forward through the thriller's disconcerting content." —Booklist
"The Stalker is an eyeball-scorching wonder, another brilliant addition to the Bomer canon. Paula Bomer shows us once again why she's one of the boldest, most intense but also most precisely observant and perversely funny novelists working today." —Sam Lipsyte, author of No One Left to Come Looking for You
"The Stalker is the kind of thrilling, demented literary fiction that will keep you reading late into the night and when you get to the end you'll want to start it all over again. Masterful." —Bud Smith, author of Teenager
This information about The Stalker was first featured
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Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.
Paula Bomer is the author of the novels Tante Eva and Nine Months and the story collections Inside Madeleine and Baby and Other Stories, as well as the essay collection Mystery and Mortality. Her work has appeared in numerous journals and magazines, including New York Magazine, Los Angeles Review of Books, BOMB, Fiction, and The Mississippi Review.
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