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Teething and Other Tales From the American Dystopia
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Teething and Other Tales From the American Dystopia
Current price: $16.99


Barnes and Noble
Teething and Other Tales From the American Dystopia
Current price: $16.99
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Featured in Zoetic Press's Heathentide Orphans and Ab Terra's 2023 Science Fiction Anthology
Debut author Stephen Nothum delivers a twisted and honest collection of short stories that places America in front of a black mirror.
Teething and Other Tales from the American Dystopia introduces readers to a strange but familiar world where AI remnants of the deceased post online for eternity, school shooters are All-American heroes, Meme Cults run havoc across the country, and people everywhere slaughter their own livestock at slaughter gyms. Other stories explore the most essential interpersonal elements of American life: a mother trapped forever in her daughter's 9th birthday party, a man plagued by the reality that his family needs to kill him, and an irresistibly lovable neighbor whose identity is a lie. Insightful and raw, Nothum's black humor forces readers to ask the same questions asked by one story's protagonist: is America getting worse, or is it only becoming clearer what America has always been? Is dystopia the future, or are we already there?
Debut author Stephen Nothum delivers a twisted and honest collection of short stories that places America in front of a black mirror.
Teething and Other Tales from the American Dystopia introduces readers to a strange but familiar world where AI remnants of the deceased post online for eternity, school shooters are All-American heroes, Meme Cults run havoc across the country, and people everywhere slaughter their own livestock at slaughter gyms. Other stories explore the most essential interpersonal elements of American life: a mother trapped forever in her daughter's 9th birthday party, a man plagued by the reality that his family needs to kill him, and an irresistibly lovable neighbor whose identity is a lie. Insightful and raw, Nothum's black humor forces readers to ask the same questions asked by one story's protagonist: is America getting worse, or is it only becoming clearer what America has always been? Is dystopia the future, or are we already there?