Saint Sebastian's Abyss
By (Author) Mark Haber
Coffee House Press
Coffee House Press
16th August 2022
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
200
Width 127mm, Height 196mm
What I wanted more than anything was to be standing beside Schmidt, in concert with Schmidt, at the foot of Saint Sebastians Abyss along with Schmidt, hands cupped to the sides of our faces, debating art, transcendence, and the glory of the apocalypse.
Former best friends who built their careers writing about a single work of art meet after a decades-long falling-out. One of them, called to the others deathbed for unknown reasons by a relatively short nine-page email, spends his flight to Berlin reflecting on Dutch Renaissance painter Count Hugo Beckenbauer and his masterpiece, Saint Sebastians Abyss, the work that established both men as important art critics and also destroyed their relationship. A darkly comic meditation on art, obsession, and the enigmatic power of friendship, Saint Sebastians Abyss stalks the museum halls of Europe, feverishly seeking salvation, annihilation, and the meaning of belief.
New York Times Book Review,Editors Choice
May Indie Next List
Publishers Weekly, Summer Reads 2022
Habers comic novel tracks the friendship, falling-out and sort-of reconciliation of two critics who have devoted their careers to a 16th-century painting of St. Sebastian that both find sublimethough for different reasons. What is it about art that can move us to extremes This absurdist take on very serious people hazards a guess. The New York Times, Editors Choice
[A] sparkling comic novel. . . . Every few pages Haber, the author of one other novel and a story collection, throws in a gem. . . . Schmidt is one of Habers keenest inventions. Jackson Arn, The New York Times
[Saint Sebastians Abyss] poses huge questions that tax the heart as much as the brain. . . . Habers slim volume quietly contemplates a possible distinction of art and not-art, as well as the nature of authority and of elitism. Taut as a drum, it also calls to mind the early novellas of Roberto Bolao and reads, at times, like an outtake from William Gaddiss The Recognitions. Andrew Ervin, The Brooklyn Rail
Haber relishes opportunities to tip sacred cows. . . . Beckenbauer and his painting are the work of Habers imagination. But his critics feel so richly realized that one could be excused for Googling Saint Sebastians Abyss to glimpse at a canvas that only exists in the book.Andrew Dansby,Houston Chronicle
In sinuous, recursive sentences infused with equal parts reverence and venom, Haber constructs a darkly parodic portrait of aesthetic devotion and intellectual friendship, in which the redemptive practice of collaborative interpretation becomes a cage that two egos relentlessly rattle. Nathan Goldman, Jewish Currents
A delightful and dizzying excursion into the relationship between art and criticism, and all the ways that we often deceive ourselves about the things and people we love. Concise and deftly rendered, it moves forward like a rocketor more accurately, like the transatlantic flight his unnamed American narrator takes to visit his friend and nemesis Schmidt in Berlin. . . . In each of their lives, the painting has become a kind of mirror, reflecting their ideas and their assertions back upon themselves. David L. Ulin, Alta Journal
Very, very funny, especially if you are an artist, or if you know any. The barbs . . . are outlandish and glorious. But its not only a farce about ill-placed obsessionsthis novel, short as it is, asks profound questions about the nature and value of art and art criticism, and also manages to be a moving account of a friendship. Emily Temple, Literary Hub
Saint Sebastians Abyss seems written for readers of Enrique Vila Matas, Cesar Aira, Roberto Bolano, and Clarice Lispector. . . . But what makes Habers book feel like it contains, as Aira puts it, an accumulation of time, is its sense of a larger, expanding world. Sean Cleary, Cleveland Review of Books
Haber writes in a deliberately hyperbolic literary style that is a lot of fun, provided youre the type of person who has a sense of humor about your own pretensions. His work reads like it has been translated from a Balkan language by an unfunny academic, which makes it, paradoxically, utterly engaging. This, Habers second novel, takes on art, professional rivalry, and male friendship. It is an all-too-brief delight! Ed Nowatka, Publishers Weekly
[A] careful, fuguelike intellectual satire. . . . Haber deliberately withholds details about the painting itselfwe know theres a donkey, a cliffside, rays of light, and apostles, but not enough to sense why [his characters] are so thunderstruck. And in a way, they hardly seem to know themselves. . . . A darkly funny novel about the wages of small-stakes intellectual combat. Kirkus
Saint Sebastians Abyss feels exactly like the description of the paintingdeceitfully small in scale, containing a cosmic abyss at its center. The mimetic impulse between the book and its themes pervades the whole reading experience. Aesthetic value, history, institutions, criticism, authorship, material conditionsthese are only some of the terms in the critical constellation that emerges in Habers beautiful, elegant novel. Hernan Diaz
A brilliantly sustained performance: clever, droll and entrancing. Mark Haber creates something entirely new, and greatly impressive, within the Bernhardian universe. Chloe Aridjis
The narrative follows the self-serious and hilarious antics of two friends-turned-rivals as they attempt to unlock the meaning of what is, by all accounts, an insignificant work by a raving and perverse madman from the 16th century. With the absurdity of academia and the meaninglessness of capital D discourse as his fodder, Haber has written one of my favorite books of 2022. Bennard F., Politics & Prose Bookstore
In Saint Sebastians Abyss, we are swept away by the hilarious and misguided preoccupations of two compulsive pedants, a comedy duo, whose misadventures are as irresistible as they are outrageous. Rikki Ducornet
There is a refreshing lightsomeness to the writing in Mark Habers new novel about art and the absurdity of academic life. The mix of love and hostility exchanged between the two art critics in this novel is both endearing and ridiculous at once. Their territorial battles over the same work of art, their willingness to upend their marriages and much of their lives over a single painting, made me laugh aloud with recognition. An absolute delight, and Habers love of writing comes through on every page. Idra Novey
Something about the deadpan confidence of Habers work has the power to convince me that imaginary paintings are real, conjured writers have walked the Earth, and the sky is purple and filled with green clouds. Were all gullible neophytes before Mark Habers breathless novels. Saint Sebastians Abyss is one of the first of its kind by an American writer, a sleek novel about Renaissance art, rivalry between friends and devotees, the perilous promise of a dead canvas, and the meaning of the obsessions that orbit our careers (and what happens when we glimpse, even briefly, meaninglessness and the abyss beyond our singular obsessions). Theres not a single sentence in this book that isnt ecstatic. To read it once is staggering; to read it again is necessary. Spencer Ruchti, Third Place Books
The master of absurdity returns with a tale of two pedants in search of transcendence (and, of course, a holy donkey). Habers prose is hypnotizing, pulling the reader through his character-driven novel as surely as languorous paint strokes lead an eye across a canvas. Saint Sebastians Abyss is obsessive, reverent, and so unique. Laura Graveline, Brazos Bookstore
I loved everything about Saint Sebastians Abyss. A fantastic tale of the glories and tribulations of chasing an ecstatic relationship to art. Matt Bell
What a wonderful, short shock of a novel this is. A superb exploration of friendship and enmity through a single painting of a long-dead and exquisitely imagined artist. An amazing meditation on life, loss, meaning, and suffocation. Funny, dark, strange, gothic, and beautifulan extraordinary journey through three broken lives. Edward Carey
In Saint Sebastians Abyss, art is the most important thing in the world, or the least; a holy calling or a pastime for narcissists; secular prayer or something that can be traded for sex. With exuberant wit and a superb array of fine-edged paradoxes, Mark Haber flays art of its pieties and pretensions, and when the cuttings done, he has us look to see if anythings left. Adam Sachs
Evocative of the work of Thomas Bernhard, Lszl Krasznahorkai, Gilbert Sorrentino, and other great literary obsessives of a satirical stripe, Saint Sebastians Abyss by Mark Haber is whip smart, scalpel sharp, wicked funny, and, ultimately, genuinely moving. Fans of Habers excellent Reinhardts Garden are in for a serious treat with this one. I loved it and cant wait to see what comes next. Laird Hunt
Praise forReinhardt's Garden
Longlisted for the 2020 PEN/Hemingway Award for a Debut Novel
The Millions, Most Anticipated of 2019
Texas Observer,Best Texas Books of the Decade
Evokes Gertrude Stein, contemporary European and South American writers like Matthias nard, Roberto Bolao, and Csar Aira, with the Quixotic atmosphere of Werner Herzog films like Fitzcarraldo. . . . A strange but lavishly imagined tale of a hard-to-describe feeling.Kirkus
An exhilarating fever dream about the search for the secret of melancholy. . . .Habers dizzying vision dextrously leads readers right into the melancholic heart ofdarkness.Publishers Weekly
Heart of Darknessviewed in a fun house mirror.Library Journal
Haber, who has been called 'one of the most influential yet low-key of tastemakers in the book world,' is about to raise it up a level with the debut of his novel.The Millions
An enchanting story of satirical wit, dark humor, and luminous creativity. . . . An exhilarating grand adventure of passion, obsession and lunacy.The Literary Review
Outstanding .
Mark Haber is the author of the 2008 story collection Deathbed Conversions and the novel Reinhardts Garden, longlisted for the 2020 PEN/Hemingway Award. He is the operations manager at Brazos Bookstore in Houston, Texas. His nonfiction has appeared in the Rumpus, Music & Literature, and LitHub. His fiction has appeared in Southwest Review and Air/Light.