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Stephen Graham Jones' book Mapping the Interior is one of those special books one wishes they would have found earlier. It is a book both about the elusive nature of truth and the potential illusion of memory—and how one young boy attempts to commune with his dead father's ghost amid a fractured reality.
Jones has been compared to David Foster Wallace and the New Sincerity movement—a literary methodology that attempts to bind the postmodern tropes of cynicism and irony with that of unalloyed sentimentalism. It turns out that horror is oftentimes one of the best genres through which to tell a love story.
You can purchase Stephen Graham Jones' "Mapping the Interior" here: https://amzn.to/3rDYyoP
Don't forget to check out The Last Sisyphus' social media, Patreon, and Substack by clicking HERE!
If you like this episode, consider sharing, subscribing, and letting me know your thoughts directly on Twitter and Instagram!
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Stephen Graham Jones' book Mapping the Interior is one of those special books one wishes they would have found earlier. It is a book both about the elusive nature of truth and the potential illusion of memory—and how one young boy attempts to commune with his dead father's ghost amid a fractured reality.
Jones has been compared to David Foster Wallace and the New Sincerity movement—a literary methodology that attempts to bind the postmodern tropes of cynicism and irony with that of unalloyed sentimentalism. It turns out that horror is oftentimes one of the best genres through which to tell a love story.
You can purchase Stephen Graham Jones' "Mapping the Interior" here: https://amzn.to/3rDYyoP
Don't forget to check out The Last Sisyphus' social media, Patreon, and Substack by clicking HERE!
If you like this episode, consider sharing, subscribing, and letting me know your thoughts directly on Twitter and Instagram!