Praise for Loudermilk An American Booksellers Association Indie Next Selection Los Angeles Times , 1 of 7 Novels Coming Out This Month That You Won''t Want to Miss Nylon''s One of the Best New Books to Read This Month An MIBA Midwest Connections Pick Frieze , What We''re Reading This Summer "Lucy Ives is as deeply funny and ferocious a writer as they come. She''s also humane and philosophical when it matters most. I love Loudermilk ." -- Sam Lipsyte, author of Hark and The Ask "This clever satire of writing programs exhibits, with persuasive bitterness, the damage wreaked by the idea that literature is competition." -- The New York Times Book Review , Editors'' Choice "Ives is either puncturing a myth about Iowa or advancing it; either option makes her book an indulgence . Ives''s interests point toward the philosophical, even the mystical. Loudermilk is not just funny; it becomes a layered exploration of the creative process . Ives approaches the students themselves with canny tenderness, and their work (which the novel excerpts, delightfully) with grave respect.
Her own language is prickly and odd, with a distracted quality, as if she were trying to narrate while another voice is murmuring in her ear." -- Katy Waldman, The New Yorker , What We''re Reading This Summer "A clever new satire of writing programs . Ives scores some fine touches." -- Caleb Crain, The New York Times Book Review "Ives'' satirical masterpiece follows poet Troy Augustus Loudermilk, a shallow Adonis recently admitted to the nation''s premiere creative-writing graduate program, located in the heart of America''s starchy middle . Laugh-out-loud funny and rife with keen cultural observations, Ives'' tale is a gloriously satisfying critique of education and creativity." -- Booklist (starred review) "The nuanced subversion of tropes and full-throttle self-indulgence of Ives''s writing lend a manic glee to this slyly funny and deeply intelligent novel." -- Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Half gonzo grad school satire featuring these two princes among men, half theoretical inquiry into the nature of writing and reality . Wonder Boys meets Cyrano de Bergerac meets Jacques Lacan meets Animal House.
Something for everyone."-- Kirkus Reviews "Hilarious . A riotous success. Equal parts campus novel, buddy comedy and meditation on art-making under late capitalism, the novel is a hugely funny portrait of an egomaniac and his nebbish best friend." -- Rebekah Frumkin, The Washington Post "Ives, who once described herself as ''the author of some kind of thinking about writing,'' examines the conditions that produce authors and their work while never losing a sense of wonder at the sheer mystery of the written word . The book''s postscript is another kind of writerly transgression, as Ives emphatically tells rather than shows. In a novel full of doubles, veils, and proxies, it makes sense that Ives concludes with yet another layer." -- Sylvia Gindick, Bookforum "A cutting, sparkling new novel from Lucy Ives .
As Ives tells the story of Loudermilk and Harry, and the assorted people they encounter on campus, it becomes clear that she is telling the story of art, of self-invention, of libertines, of culture, of America. Needless to say, things get dark. And yet, it never gets so dark that you can''t see what''s right in front of you, in all of its tragic hilarity: the truth of what America is at its very worst and its very best--which, as it turns out, are pretty much the same thing." -- Kristin Iversen, NYLON "A book where profound poststructuralist meditations on language, chance and creativity are deftly spun through with a myriad of jokes about farting, sex and male anatomy . With the Bush presidency and invasion of Iraq playing out ambiently and calamitously in the background, Loudermilk perfectly captures the strange cultural ethos of the early 2000s . With razor-sharp prose and a plenitude of linguistic strangeness, Ives has written a novel about American college life that is both philosophically gripping and exceptionally hilarious." -- Emma Levy, Shelf Awareness (starred review) "A narrative in defense of narrative . In a literary critical flourish, [Ives] combines elements of libertine novels, realist novels, social novels, inherited wealth lit, postmodern novels, period pieces, poetry, satire, and revenge plots .
A funny and cutting novel whose critiques of inherited wealth and its effects on culture in the aughts will keep being true until a full redistribution of wealth, beginning with reparations, occurs." -- Charlie Markbreiter, The Nation "The novel is sharply satirical and laugh-out-loud funny. Loudermilk is a ridiculous character, in the best way: the famous Iowa workshop is not at all prepared for him. This is a fast-paced, entertaining read, but also one that has a lot to say about poetry, the university, and the endeavor of teaching creative writing." -- Rebecca Hussey, Book Riot "[Ives] has a fondness for wordplay, and moves between registers to comic effect." -- Adam Wilson, 4Columns " Loudermilk , a satire, explores a complex web of plot and episodes, thick descriptions, biting character arcs, poetic and philosophical precision, stylistically different stories/poems within stories, the nature of time, and the mirage of power (or the possibility of unveiling politics, and cracking open agency). By employing a classical theatrical technique of dramatis personae, rather than ''realistic'' novel characters, perhaps Ives is able to move between so many registers that enable her unusual ''mash-up'' to excel as at once philosophical and planted in the mud . Ives''s style of satire shatters the dichotomy between meta-narrative and human empathy.
Breaking such a distinction requires rare observational skill, patience, and multi-genre flexibility and curiosity." -- Elizabeth Block, The Brooklyn Rail "Ives''s new novel is one of the funniest in recent memory, stuffed with jabs at writers and toxic masculinity, bluntly yonic allusions, and feuilleton-esque prose that prances on page . What Ives is playing with here is not just beautiful sentences and humorous situations, it''s the disharmony felt at the core of our experiences . Though the empirical distinctions between prose and poetry are often illusory, Ives finds a way to make her prose both a kind of communication--as is expected--as well as a construction of satire. Her words linger longer than normal trade, and find ways to avoid their disintegration, as if the must of a punchline is more lasting, more fragrant; words this eloquently framed and humorous imprint, and, often enough, hold us in their absurdity." -- Thomas Hrycyk, The Adroit Journal "Readers expecting yet another referendum on the MFA will be pleasantly surprised to discover a much stranger and more ambitious book. In Loudermilk , Ives has taken a subject notoriously difficult to make interesting--the difficulty of writing itself--and narrativized it into an elaborate plot peopled by avatars of the types Sontag enumerated decades ago . Sontag says a good writer must be a fool and an obsessive, that the critic and the stylist are bonuses (so, inessential).
But Ives--not just for her own erudition and syntactical artistry, remarkable as they are--counters that it is the critic and the stylist who are indispensable, for they are the ones who interface thought with language." -- Jameson Fitzpatrick, The Believer "This send-up of contemporary graduate writing programs and the characters they attract and create is sure to highly amuse any reader, especially those with a penchant for academia-set hijinks. Reminiscent of Michael Chabon, this highly original satiric novel is sharp-witted and adroit. Brava." -- Jenny Lyons, Addison County Independent "Lucy Ives mixes genres with unusual abandon in her second novel, Loudermilk . The narrative could be regarded as a campus novel, a portrait of the artist, a scam story, a retelling of Cyrano de Bergerac , or a farce . Loudermilk is a novel about the tension between art and life, and the conflict between labor and power." -- Lily Meyer, On the Seawall "With Loudermilk , Lucy Ives weaves a wryly comic tale set in the insular, masturbatory world of a Midwest MFA program.
Dissecting ideas around authenticity, status, and the chronic wish for fame or legacy that plagues or drives aspiring writers and established authors/professors alike, Ives tears down the curtain to unveil the wizard--and here all the characters are implicated in operating the clunky machinery that creates then lionizes the concept of merit or talent in the academic/literary world. In Loudermilk , the mundanity of the graduate writing program takes on a mythical air; Ives''s hapless or conniving characters are masterfully written as program archetypes doomed to wander the halls of the seminars at Crete, shuffling from workshop to workshop, foolishly or laboriously trying to locate whatever they think it means to be a writer. The result is this wildly smart novel that hilariously exposes its characters as they try to vault or cement themselves into some literary canon and/or ivory tower, unaware that the canon/tower is an ever-vanishing mausoleum wherein living writers go to get stuck, or lost, or to scrawl their names and draw butts and boobs on the walls." -- Jen George, author of The Babysitter.