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"Like language, like summer, like love, OBLIVION is irresistible."
Junot Diaz
Robin Hemley's Oblivion: An After Autobiography has that quality that every reader yearns
for-one lies down on a couch and curls up and nothing else is going to happen until one
finishes reading it. I read it one long, delirious day. The work is largely about the "saving" nature
of the imagination. It's surprisingly funny and always utterly, mortifyingly serious. The book is
also very much about being a writer, an artificer, and being willing to do anything to get the
words out-anything? Apparently so. What makes Oblivion profound is that it's about a writer's
hope to escape oblivion, and how universal a human yearning that is, because every human
being is utterly terrified of death and oblivion, and we all contrive ways to tell ourselves that we
won't be forgotten. It's Hemley's best book-the book he was born to write and has been
dying, as it were, to write his whole life. I truly admire and love the book. - David Shields,
author of The Last Interview and Reality Hunger