I Heart Oklahoma
By (Author) Roy Scranton
Soho Press
Soho Press
19th April 2021
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
288
Width 139mm, Height 209mm
Roy Scranton, controversial and critically-acclaimed, brings us a formally daring road trip into the heart of present-day America. Suzie's seen it all, but now she's looking for something she lost- a sense of the future. So when the chance comes to work with a maverick video artist on his road movie about Donald Trump's America, she's pretty sure it's a bad idea but she signs up anyway, hoping for an outside shot at starting over. A provocative, genderqueer, shapeshifting musical romp through the brain-eating nightmare of contemporary America, I Heart Oklahoma! is a book about art, guns, cars, American landscapes, and American history. This kaleidoscopic novel moves from our bleeding-edge present to a furious Faulknerian retelling of the Charlie Starkweather killings in the 1950s, capturing in its fragmented, mesmerizing form the violence at the heart of the American dream.
The Millions Most Anticipated Fall Books
Praise for I Oklahoma!
Few critics quite understand the implications of our cultural divisions in the warm autumn of the Anthropocene more than University of Notre Dame English professor Roy Scranton.
The Millions
Part existential farce, part metatextual dystopian road trip romp,I Oklahoma!is ambitious, omnivorous, inventive, and imbued with a dark and hilarious sense of whimsy. If your personal journey through the American wasteland has begun to feel like a slog, this book will remind you that there's a certain thrill in watching the show unfold from the first-row seats, the ones in the splash zone.
Alexandra Kleeman, author of You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine
With whip-smart, multivalent prose akin to Barry Hannah spliced with William S. Burroughs, IOklahoma!reads like a hypermodern Heart of Darkness, aimed straight into the malefic gnarl of Trump's MAGA. The result is an epochal, brainbending prism of a road novel, catalyzing any branded icon that might crop up into its wakefrom Deleuze to Taylor Swift, Beuys to Bonnie and Clyde, ISIS to TMZinto an immaculate reflection of a nation mesmerized by its own free fall through oblivion.
Blake Butler, author of Three Hundred Million
Roy Scrantons fiction has a shattering and deranged vitality. It breaks into your mind and hangs on. I Oklahoma! reads like a fever dreamcacophonous road-tripping anti-manifesto gives way to lavish degenerate theatre gives way to bloody killing spree. In this eventful novel, the precipitating event is always and ever languagetransgressive, rhizomatic, and infinitely mutable.
Noy Holland, author of I Was Trying to Describe What It Feels Like
"There is something dangerous and dizzying about Scranton's writing, a violence of ideas. In I Oklahoma!, he turns his intellectual weapons on an elusive and necessary subjectthe mystery that is America, and the extent to which even those people marinated fully in the mythology of this country can find themselves at a loss to understand it."
Omar El Akkad, author of American War
I Oklahoma! invents new forms to capture the psychotic break that is present-day America. Its simultaneously a deconstructed road novel, pop culture avalanche, and historical serial killer storya book about how the countrys rotted myths have come home to roost. Boasting gleaming intelligence and batshit abandon, this is vital, unsettling, and urgent work.
Jeff Jackson, author of Destroy All Monsters
Scranton isnt just a writer; hes also a musician. Language bops, pops, hisses, and yowls throughout this marvel of a novel, evoking the sounds and rhythms of regional dialects, Beat poetry, and art rock. At base, this is a story about a cross-country road trip in the age of MAGA. But Scranton explodes the traditional journey narrative with daring inventiveness and an unflinching look at the bloody violence that has always pumped through the heart of America.
Literary Hub
Scranton loops and wheels through states of varying lucidity, sometimes employing a stream-of-consciousness prose style and sometimes more straightforward storytelling . . . This novel of sex, violence, apathy, despair and art offers a bizarre, lightning-paced excursion through the present. For those readers on board with its wild, winding style,I Oklahoma!incisively parodies a weird time to be alive.
Shelf Awareness
Simultaneously high flown and earthy, like a Platonic dialogue as written by Quentin Tarantino . . . this novel has big ambitions, a whipsawing imaginative energy, and, at its heart, the urgency and earnestness of a jeremiad.
Kirkus Reviews
Praise for Roy Scranton
[Scranton] writes clearly and convincingly about the emotional, existential challenges that attracted him to war, and how he was changed by the time he returned home.
The New York Times
One of the best and most disturbing war novels in years.
The Wall Street Journal
What impresses is the brutal immediacy of the writing, its authority. Roy Scranton is a truth-telling war writer.
E.L. Doctorow, National Book Critics Circle Award-winning author ofRagtimeandThe March
Roy Scrantons searingly honest first novel is surreal, ultra-real, and like everything he writes from the heart. This examination of the tragedy of what happened in Iraq reaches out to touch of all us. A brilliant literary achievement.
Jeff VanderMeer, author of the Southern Reach trilogy
Powerful, engaging, heartrending, corrosive and unyielding.
Joyce Carol Oates
Roy Scranton is one of the most gifted writers of his generation.
Amitav Ghosh
Roy Scranton has been a dishwasher, truck driver, phone psychic, caregiver, door-to-door canvasser, telemarketer, soldier, short-order cook, fry cook, and journalist. He is the author of Learning to Die in the Anthropocene, the novel War Porn, and the essay collection We're Doomed. Now What He has been awarded a Whiting Fellowship and a Lannan Literary Fellowship, among other honors, and holds a PhD in English from Princeton. He lives in Indiana, where he teaches at the University of Notre Dame.