PRAISE & REVIEWS
Dylan
Landis has a keen eye for the right detail, and is a master of deciding
what to include--and what to leave out. Leah and her enigmatic mother
Helen are authentic, vulnerable characters, whose private truths are
exposed at perfect, unexpected moments. Normal People Don't Live Like This is a wonderful, intriguing, and original debut.
ELIZABETH STROUT, author of Olive Kitteridge, Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, 2009
NEWSDAY TOP 10 BOOKS OF 2009. "Tense and intense, Landis' prose is as taut and alluring as her characters."
Marion Winik, NEWSDAY
Landis's characters and the rich, rough worlds they inhabit are rendered with bracing precision and devastating grace. I can't think of the last time I read a debut collection so powerfully alive.
Justin Taylor, TIME OUT NEW YORK
Listed in the "Amazing Short Stories" category of THE TOP 100 BOOKS EVERY WOMAN SHOULD READ.
MORE magazine
Dylan Landis has a gift for creating characters...watch her very
carefully. Once you can create characters like Leah (or Angeline,
Rainey and Helen), there's no stopping you.
Susan Salter Reynolds, THE LOS ANGELES TIMES
Landis knows when to be dreamy, and she knows when to be sharp...These lost,
damaged, but oh so alive women imprint themselves on the reader's
heart...Dylan Landis' precisely observed women are on the verge of
everything, capable of anything.
Susan Larson, Book Editor, The New Orleans TIMES-PICAYUNE
The characters in Dylan Landis's debut story collection, Normal People Don't Live Like This, are blessedly extraordinary.
VANITY FAIR, Hot Type column by Elissa Schappell
Nothing appeals to me more than a collection of artfully arranged short stories that add up to a truthful, imperfect life. Landis's characters, spanning adolescence to adulthood, are both funny and frank, vulnerable and resilient.
Sandra Beasley, WASHINGTONIAN magazine
Landis...writes here in a style attuned to inadvertent beauty.
We see "the thin skull of her mer medium-boiled egg"...the women with
"curbstone eyes." In such eloquent prose, Landis conveys the
understanding that it is a mean, dangerous, wonderful world.
Mindy Farabee, RAIN TAXI
You read Normal People on the treadmill. You read it on the sidewalk.
You meet Landis's characters and you like them more than the people you
know in real life. You think, while tearing through the pages: This woman knows all my secrets. Much like the work of Alice Munro,
the intrigue of Landis's stories likes in small gestures and the
exploration of characters' psyches with a thorough, delicate eye.
THE RUMPUS.NET, review by Megan Casella Roth
A clear-eyed account of what
it's like to be a teenage girl: Leah Levinson is gripped by the sexual
escapades of her classmates and enamored of mean girls (her "heart
sprouted like a seed" when one phoned her). The tales in this
bravura work, set in the 1970s, are timeless: They could easily belong
to our daughters' generation instead of our own.
MORE magazine, Great Reads by Sara Nelson & Holiday Books to Give & Get
Delicious
writing...Evocative, lyrical prose, and vivid imagery coupled with a
subtle fictional approach, mysterious references, and ambiguities. Buy
this for your literary fiction readers and short story
fans—they’ll appreciate it.
BOOKLIST, review by Ellen Loughran
Teenage girls make for compelling fictional
subjects, and portraying them honestly requires a certain grit...Landis
doesn't flinch, lavishing attention on Leah's obsessive-compulsiveness,
the jumbled contents of her underwear drawer, and a friend's sudden
miscarriage.
BOOKFORUM, review by Eryn Loeb
Read it one story at a time. Read it as a novel. Read it out of order. Read it upside-down. Just read it. You’ll see what I mean.
THE WRITER'S CENTER, review by Caitlin Hill
In this bracing debut, Dylan Landis guides us
into the harsh, secretive world of girls, where the mysteries of power
and sexuality baldly govern, and adults and teenagers occasionally
intersect across the barbed wire of a mutually earned mistrust.
JANET FITCH, author of White Oleander and Paint it Black
Dylan Landis matches Margaret Atwood in her richly detailed acts of malice.
Politics & Prose bookstore
Dylan Landis leaves me breathless with
admiration. Her haunting, luminous characters hold secrets we can't
help but recognize as our own, and we're privy to their most intimate,
complicated moments. Beautiful and unrelenting, Normal People Don't Live Like This had me nodding and sighing and thinking, 'Oh, but we do, we do.'
LISA GLATT, author of A Girl Becomes a Comma Like That and The Apple's Bruise
These stories live in fear and move with grace and surprise. They’re edgy yet sophisticated, touching even in their violence...The
deeper Landis dives into her characters’ particular passions and
lunacy...the more she clarifies her characters’ lives, and our
own.
The COLLAGIST, reviewed by Stacy Muszynsky
Using
pen stroke instead of brush stroke, Landis’ understated storytelling is
like a painting. Character traits and experiences—and preferred
cigarette brands—are conveyed by illustration rather than explanation. It is a style that turns the banal poetic,
and the hair-raising mundane. In the process, Landis is afforded the
space to be candid and detached. She neither reveres nor pities her
characters and their sordid affairs. Outlaw behavior may be scandalous.
It may be counter-culture. It may be kids being kids, or adults just
trying to get by. Ultimately, she quietly reminds us that this—the
“this” implied by the title—is not the domain of others. Normal people do live like this.
Emilie Tarrant, StyleSubstanceSoul.com
This poignant portrait of sexual exploration gone awry leaves us aching...The stories are not just one girl's coming of age, but how all of us come of age."
Jennifer Wisner Kelly, COLORADO REVIEW
These
interlinked stories about young women, their mothers, and lovers will
stay with you long after you close this lovely pink book. Normal People Don't Live Like This is the perfect gift for a friend with a couch, a blanket, and a Saturday afternoon.
NOSE IN A BOOK blog
Landis has delivered with precision, honesty and art the adolescent female mind....For
anyone wishing to understand those defining, and yet often lost
moments, of a girl trying to leap into womanhood, this is a must read.
KATRINA DENZA literary blog
Dylan
Landis’s short story collection Normal People Don’t Live Like This is a
stunning collection, the kind where the sentences are so rich and
gorgeous you want to read them aloud to whomever you’re with.
Rachel Kramer Bussel on JAUNTSETTER
Her writing is a treat...an impressive and original collection that you'll devour quicky but still be thinking about weeks later.
THREE GOOD RATS blog
Every character expresses bravery and vulnerability in the same narrative moment...The writing provokes me to lunge towards my desk, and do better with my own.
Jodi Paloni, RIGMAROLE
and a sampling of lit-blogger & website love
"What you should read next" -- Rachel Kramer Bussel
"Best books I read this year" -- Lori Rader Day
Fascinating story on how Justin Taylor found, and bought, NPDLLT -- HTMLGiant
Novelist Susan Henderson says generous things to Julianna Baggott
"An audacious debut." Washington Life
Jacket Copy's ardent blog coverage of the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books
Janice Shapiro, author of Bummer, likes NPDLLT on L Magazine
Jocelyn Johnson blogs about a Charlottesville WriterHouse talk
Susan says yes in Sun Pours Down Like Honey
Poet & memoirist Sandra Beasley responds to galleys in Chicks Dig Poetry
Madam Mayo lets me guest-blog on mysterious spaces, and says lovely things
Rob Spillman, editor of Tin House, tells Story In Literary Fiction how he found me
Kate Gale of Red Hen Press immortalizes the NPDLLT book party in LA