Jason Mott has published three previous novels. His first novel, The Returned, was a New York Times bestseller and was turned into a TV series that ran for two seasons. He has a BFA in Fiction and an MFA in Poetry, both from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. His poetry and fiction have appeared in various literary journals.
Brilliant and inventive ... You'll cry tears of laughter.
*The Sunday Times*
Beautiful and deeply moving . . . I'd go as far as to say it's an
important book and everyone should read it.
*Imran Mahmood*
For all its moments of levity, Mott has written a deadly serious
story ... Hell of a Book offers a disturbing portrait of a nation
that's been lying to itself all its years. In this way, the novel
feels like a plea - intense, moving, urgent, and vital.
*Washington Independent Review of Books*
In a structurally and conceptually daring examination of art, fame,
family and being black in America, Mott somehow manages the
impossible trick of being playful, insightful and deeply moving,
all at the same time. A highly original, inspired work that breaks
new ground
*National Book Award Judges*
How to possibly describe Mott's fourth novel without simply
borrowing from its moniker? It is, after all, a hell of a book.
*Entertainment Weekly*
Hell of a Book more than lives up to its title. Playful, searching,
raw and necessary, this writing, this voice, this novel twisted me
up and turned me inside out, dazzled me, surprised me and moved
me
*Charles Yu, author of Interior Chinatown*
A black author embarks on a cross-country book tour to promote his
new book, but he's followed by a (possibly imaginary) child. The
author's story is intertwined with the narrative of Soot, a young
black boy living in a rural town. Mott has written a clever
meditation on race and violence in America.
*New York Post*
Maddening, disorienting and illuminating
*Booklist*
Powerful, timely and provocative
*Abi Daré*
Hell of a Book consistently proves itself to be more than the sum
of its parts: a farce that provokes contemplation, a publishing
parody that rings true; an honest and emotive meditation on
systematic racial injustice and the myriad ways in which it breaks
the human soul. Sharp, funny, evocative and never anything less
than utterly poignant, Mott's novel chronicles the experience and
cost of racism for black Americans with a clarity that is
justifiably unsettling. Hell of a Book is distinctly American tale
of racial trauma told with a dry, almost painful humour that
scrapes at the reader's heart.
*Irish Times*
A twisty and startling narrative about the blurry lines between
reality and fiction
*TIME Magazine*
Hilarious and moving, thoughtful and madcap . . . a hell of an
accomplishment.
*Jonathan Evison, author of West of Here and Small World*
A dizzying yet dazzling exploration of exploration itself.
*Kiese Laymon, author of How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in
America*
A profound exploration of love, friendship, and racial violence . .
. A story that is at once a paean to familial love and friendship
and a reckoning with racism and police violence. By turns playful
and surprising and intimate, a moving meditation on being Black in
America.
*Kirkus Reviews*
Stunning . . . Mott's poetic, cinematic novel tackles what it means
to live in a country where Black people perpetually "live lives
under the hanging sword of fear." Absurdist metafiction doesn't get
much better.
*Publisher’s Weekly*
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