Who is Rich
By (Author) Matthew Klam
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
2nd May 2019
2nd May 2019
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Modern and Contemporary romance
Contemporary lifestyle fiction
Satirical fiction and parodies
Erotic romance
Narrative theme: Love and relationships
813.6
Paperback
336
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 24mm
260g
Who is Rich Is a tantalizing novel acute and smart and stark, but mostly its unrelentingly funny about a large number of very inappropriate things. Its one of those rare books: you open it, then youre up all night. I was Richard Ford
Every summer, a once-sort-of famous cartoonist named Rich Fischer leaves his wife and two kids behind to teach a class at a week-long arts conference in a charming New England beachside town. Its a place where drum circles happen on the beach at midnight, clothing optional. Rich finds himself worrying about his familys nights without him, his back taxes, his stuttering career and his own very real desire for love and human contact. One of the attendees this year is a forty-one-year-old painting student named Amy ODonnell. Amy is a mother of three, unhappily married to a brutish Wall Street titan who commutes to work via helicopter. Rich and Amy met at the conference a year ago, shared a moment of passion, then spent the winter exchanging inappropriate texts and emails and counting the days until they could see each other again.
Now theyre back.
Who Is Rich is a warped and exhilarating tale of love and lust, a study in midlife alienation, erotic pleasure, envy, and bitterness in the new gilded age that goes far beyond humour and satire to address deeper questions: of family, monogamy, the intoxicating beauty of children and the challenging interdependence of two soulful, sensitive creatures in a confusing domestic alliance.
Regardless of British qualms about the American takeover of the Man Booker prize, Who Is Rich feels like another strong transatlantic candidate for 2018.
Mark Lawson, Guardian
Who is Rich Is a tantalizing novel acute and smart and stark, but mostly its unrelentingly funny about a large number of very inappropriate things. Its one of those rare books: you open it, then youre up all night. I was Richard Ford
Matthew Klam writes beautifully about the strange, extraordinary adventure of being human. Who is Rich is tragic and comic in equal measure, written with a poignancy that makes you laugh and simultaneously wince in recognition. A profoundly memorable novel Elizabeth Day
I loved every page of this book. It got into my bloodstream and kind of destroyed me Curtis Sittenfeld
What a thrill to experience the fusion of Matthew Klams fierce, kinetic prose Jennifer Egan
I seriously, deeply love this book Michael Cunningham
A stunner . . . funny, dark, big, and bold . . . Who Is Rich Is not to be missed Meg Wolitzer
Political in a way that is not always noted because it is also so funny Lorrie Moore
Immediately engaging a stylish romp through the inbuilt disappointment of middle age Lionel Shriver, Observer
Buy it and read it in one sitting Sunday Times Style
Its a portrait of the triumphs and disasters of modern fatherhood, and the pram in the hall. Its a How We Live Now novel, one of the best to come along in a while Esquire
'You know those big American novels that you sometimes lose a couple of days to This is one of those books, conjuring up the humour and narrative of a John Irving or AM Homes book out a weekend to read it' Stylist
Comic, wondrous, and sad New Yorker
Its the funniest novel Ive read in ages and one of the saddest will please anyone who likes their protagonists clever and deluded, hopeful and doomedJoe Dunthorne, Guardian
Fantastically funny Scottish Daily Mail
Matthew Klam was named one of the twenty best fiction writers in America under 40 by The New Yorker. He's a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Robert Bingham/PEN Award, a Whiting Writer's Award, and an O Henry Award. His first book, Sam The Cat and Other Stories, a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book of the Year in the category of first fiction, was selected as a Notable Book of the Year by The New York Times, Esquire Magazine, The Los Angeles Times, The Kansas City Star, and by the Borders for their New Voices series. His work has been featured in The New Yorker, Harper's Magazine, Esquire, GQ Magazine, and The New York Times Magazine. He is a graduate of the University of New Hampshire and Hollins College, and has taught creative writing in many places including Johns Hopkins University, St. Albans School, American University, and Stockholm University in Sweden.