Two generations of an American family come of age – one before 9/11, one after – in this moving and original novel from the “intellectually restless, uniquely funny” (New York Times Book Review) mind of Nell Zink
Praise for Doxology
‘Doxology, her fifth and best book yet, is more than worth shouting about … a big American novel of the very best kind, mainlining the anxieties of our age, but with just the right dose of love and mercy to take the edge off’ Financial Times
‘This is a typical Zink novel, in that it’s totally unpredictable … the random nature of life is one of Doxology’s themes … Zink injects all of this with her usual deadpan hilarity, while her cast of inimitable misfits are never in danger of being overshadowed by her larger concerns’ Stephanie Cross, Daily Mail
‘Even the things we know are going to happen retain the weight of the unexpected, and that is down to Zink’s facility for recreating not just detail but also the texture of the past’ Sarah Ditum, The Spectator
‘An ambitious and original novel’ Image Magazine
‘It’s superb. In terms of its author’s ability to throw dart after dart after dart into the center of your media-warped mind and soul, it’s the novel of the summer and possibly the year. It’s bliss. Doxology puts her on a new level as a novelist. This book is more ambitious and expansive and sensitive than her earlier work. She lays her heart on the line in a way she hasn’t before’ New York Times
‘This is a one-of-a-kind writer … this must-read confronts today’s political climate front on’ Elle
‘Invigorating’ Guardian
‘Zink’s idiosyncratic, intrusive presence and her taste for sudden reversals in tone and plot have won her praise as a flouter of convention…Zink’s style is certainly vivid and outlandish, morally adventurous and uncontained’ John Maier, Literary Review
Nell Zink grew up in rural Virginia. She has worked at a variety of trades, including masonry and technical writing, and in the early 1990s, edited an indie rock fanzine. Her books include The Wallcreeper and Mislaid and her writing has appeared in n+1. She lives near Berlin, Germany.