Table of Contents
About The Book
A creative writing professor at a third-tier college in upstate New York is on his way home from a summer fellowship in France, where he’s spent the last three months loafing around Bordeaux, tasting the many varieties of French wine at his disposal, and doing just about anything but actually working on his long overdue novel. A stopover in Brooklyn to see his and his wife’s closest friends—John, a jaded poet-turned-lawyer with a dubious moral compass, and Sophie, a once-promising fiction writer with a complicated past and a mysterious allure—causes further trouble when he and Sophie wind up sleeping together while John is out serenading Brooklyn coeds with poems instead of preparing legal briefs.
But instead of succumbing to his failures as a teacher, writer, and husband, an odd freedom begins to bubble up. Could a love affair be the answer he’s been searching for? Could it offer the escape he needs from the department chair, Chet Bland, who’s been breathing down his neck? Relief from the gossip of colleagues and generational tension with students? Respite from embarrassment with his wife, Debra Crawford, and her meteoric rise as a novelist? His escapades might even make the perfect raw material for an absolutely devastating novel, which would earn him tenure, wealth, and celebrity—everything he needs to be set for life. If only he could be the one to write it.
A brilliant case of art imitating life, Andrew Ewell’s “sharp, witty” (Richard Russo, author of Straight Man) debut is a poignant tour de force that asks who owns whose story, skewers the fictions created from our lives and others’, and brings a whole new meaning to the phrase “publish or perish.”
Product Details
- Publisher: Simon & Schuster (February 6, 2024)
- Length: 256 pages
- ISBN13: 9781668011447
Raves and Reviews
"A hilarious novel...[with] narrative tension that keeps the pages turning."—The Post and Courier
"An exceedingly smooth debut. . . Set for Life keeps up a terrific running gag about the genre-fication of literary fiction and the increasingly commercially minded publishing world. As unsympathetic as the narrator can be, what will keep readers turning pages is the brute authenticity of his voice, which makes the novel go down as easy as the alcohol he guzzles without compunction or conscience."—Shelf Awareness
“Ewell’s novel is more than just a book-long treatise on the failings of contemporary literature. It is probably best described as a kind of campus comedy of errors in the vein of Richard Russo’s Straight Man or Michael Chabon’s Wonder Boys.”—Chicago Review of Books
“I’d been reading Set for Life for about half an hour when I realized it was approaching 11:30 p.m. I told myself I’d stop for the night in just a few pages. The next time I looked up from Andrew Ewell’s debut novel it was an hour later … and I still needed to find a good place to stop.”—The Los Angeles Times
"Ewell’s promising first novel deftly explores the processes of artistic creation and ownership while expertly skewering the ludicrous priorities of contemporary academia."—Booklist
"Set for Life is a hilarious novel about failure, lost youth and squandered dreams. Andrew Ewell seems to be an expert on bad decisions, self destructive behavior and hangovers. His hugely entertaining debut reminds me of Frederick Exley's classic A Fan's Notes."—Jay McInerney, author of Bright Lights, Big City
“Have you ever wondered why some of the smartest, best educated people you know are among the most hopelessly lost? Well, so has Andrew Ewell, and he’d love to explain it to you in Set for Life, his sharp, witty and surprisingly moving academic novel."—Richard Russo, author of Straight Man and Somebody's Fool
"A sharp, entertaining chronicle of male vanity and self-sabotage that deserves a place alongside other boozy masters of the genre such as Fred Exley and David Gates."—Jim Gavin, creator of Lodge 49 and author of Middle Men
"Set for Life is the best kind of comedy—comedy that grows out of the vagaries of the human heart. Andrew Ewell explores the nature of betrayal—the betrayal of friends, lovers, of our own selves—with a wisdom born of sorrow and the residue of youthful dreams."—Gregory Blake Smith, author of The Maze at Windermere
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