"A genre-bending horror thriller that grapples with adolescent desire and existential dread... Gooey, gory, and frightening, Kennedy's latest will appeal to fans of coming-of-age horror."—Booklist
"An eerie, surrealist twist on the American Midwest, highlighting everything unusual about small-town living... the focus on creating a desolate and strange atmosphere pays off. Horror fans who value ambiance over jump scares will want to check this out."—Publishers Weekly
"A Lynchian sense of creeping nastiness, rooted in the way small-town life can be stifling, pervades a novel that, as its various plot strands come together, has a whirlwind energy that's hard to resist. Four stars."—SFX Magazine
"Strap yourselves in for a super-storm of psycho-sexual intensity: American gothic, full-blown horror, wrapped up in an adolescent coming-of-age tale... Don’t try to understand, just get swept up and enjoy the ride."—Daily Mail
"Worth the cover price for sheer insolence alone... Essential reading for the gathering dark." —The Times Saturday Review
"A voraciously readable page-turner of a novel, part creepypasta, part thought-experiment." —Cory Doctorow, author of Little Brother and Radicalized
"Explores questions of free will, psychology and human history in a fascinating, compulsively readable thriller."—The Guardian
“An entertainingly mind-bending read.”—Financial Times
"Audaciously clever and well written... [a] superb piece of storytelling: vivid, thought provoking and unsettling. After you finish it you’ll want to go back to the start and read it again." —SFX Magazine
"A razor-smart sci-fi corporate noir nightmare. Dare to Know is what happens when Willy Loman sees through the Matrix. A heartbreaking, time-bending, galactic mindbender delivered in the mordantly funny clip of a doomed antihero." —Daniel Kraus, co-author of The Shape of Water
"Hilarious . . . Readers with a finely tuned sense of the absurd are going to adore the Technicolor ride."
—Booklist
"Fantasy done to a clever, grotesque, nonsensical turn." —Chicago Sun-Times
"A work of mischievous imagination and outrageous invention." —Time Out Chicago
"An extraordinary and delightfully weird romp that’s one part China Mieville, one part Lemony Snicket, with trace amounts of Madeline L’Engle and Roald Dahl . . . Kennedy has filled 400+ pages with a series of strange turn-ups and adventures that grow progressively more outlandish and funny, such that when you think he’s surely run out of runway and must crash, he finds new, unsuspected weirdness to explore.” —Cory Doctorow, author of Little Brother, For The Win, and co-editor of Boing Boing
Email: kennedyjames@gmail.com
Monday, October 2, 2023
Doing an in-store author event for Bride of the Tornado at Powell's Bookstore at Cedar Hills Blvd near Portland (3415 SW Cedar Hills Blvd, Beaverton, OR). In conversation with author Laini Taylor (Strange the Dreamer, Daughter of Smoke and Bone trilogy). 7 pm.
Wednesday, October 4, 2023
Doing an in-store author event for Bride of the Tornado at Books Inc. at Laurel Village (3515 California St, San Francisco). 7 pm. More details here.
Thursday, October 12, 2023
Doing an in-store author event for Bride of the Tornado at Head House Books (619 South 2nd St, Philadelphia). 6:30 pm. More details here.
Friday, October 13, 2023
I'm appearing at New York Comic-Con on a panel called "The Horror, The Horror" with other horror authors Delilah S. Dawson, Mariam Metoui, Richard Kadrey, and Trang Thanh Tran. 12:15 pm-1:15 pm, Room 1B-02, Javits Center, NYC. Complete information here.
Friday, October 27, 2023
Doing an in-store author event for Bride of the Tornado at Sidetrack Bookshop (325 S. Washington, Royal Oak, MI). 6:30 pm. Details and free RSVP here.
Friday, January 26, 2024
NATIONAL DEADLINE for entries to the 13TH annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival!
Saturday, February 17, 2024
The OGDEN, UTAH screening of the 13th annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. At the Treehouse Children's Museum (347 22nd Street). 6 pm.
Saturday, March 2, 2024
The BROOKLYN, NY screening of the 13th annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. In the Dweck Auditorium at the Brooklyn Public Library (10 Grand Army Plaza). 1 pm.
Friday, March 8, 2024
SPECIAL DEADLINE for entries for the Boston, Rochester, San Antonio, Tacoma, and Gig Harbor screenings of the 90-Second Newbery Film Festival.
Saturday, March 9, 2024
The CHICAGO screening of the 13th annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. In the Cindy Pritzker Auditorium at the Harold Washington Library Center (400 S. State Street). 2 pm.
Saturday, April 6, 2024
The BOSTON screening of the 13th annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. In Rabb Hall at the Central Library in Copley Square (700 Boylston Street). 3 pm.
Saturday, April 20, 2024
The ROCHESTER, NY screening of the 13th annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. In the Dryden Theater at the George Eastman Museum (900 East Avenue). 2 pm.
Saturday, May 11, 2024
The SAN ANTONIO screening of the 13th annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. In the H-E-B Performance Hall at the Tobin Center for the Performing Arts. More details to come.
Speculative Thrillers That Blur The Line Between Physics and Philosophy. An article I wrote for Crimereads.com in which I talk about "metaphysical technology" in the works of Isaac Asimov, Cixin Liu, Tanizaki Junichiro, Kelly Link, Colson Whitehead, Thomas Ligotti, Angela Carter, Susannah Clarke, and even obscurities like T.L Sherred and text adventure writer Brian Moriarty (anyone else remember Infocom's Trinity?)
Interview for the Chicago Review of Books. Devi Bhaduri interviews me about our changing emotional relationship to technology, my "Elf Theory" of friendship, and how L. Ron Hubbard stole the girlfriend (and life savings) of one of the people who inspired Dare to Know.
Interview for Shelf Awareness. Paul Dinh-McCrillis reviews Dare To Know and interviews me. Find out which parts of the book are inspired by Del Close's death-visions, a baffling cab ride I took with my wife, and why I dread December 19, 2046!
Interview for the Japanese Consulate's E-Japan Journal. Austin Gilkeson interviews me about my time in the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program (JET) from 2004-2006. We discuss how living in Japan inspired me for The Order of Odd-Fish and Dare To Know, plus we talk about my experiences on the 88 Temples of Shikoku Pilgrimage and the time a Japanese schoolboy sang Avril Lavigne's "Complicated" to me on the train.
The 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. I founded a film festival in which kid filmmakers create weird short movies that tell the entire stories of Newbery-winning books in about 90 seconds. Now in its 6th year, it screens annually in 14 cities: New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and many others! The movies the kids create are weird, funny, and impressive. Learn more about the film festival here.
The Secrets of Story Podcast. I host a podcast with Matt Bird, the author of a book and blog called The Secrets of Story, in which we discuss (okay, argue about) advice for novelists and screenwriters.
The Classroom Guide to The Order of Odd-Fish. I've put together a 44-page Teacher's Guide / curriculum for Odd-Fish! It's a treasure trove of creative project ideas, discussion questions, chapter worksheets, and further resources. It also features fan art by enthusiastic teen readers of Odd-Fish. (This art was featured in a fan art gallery show in Chicago in April 2010.) You can download the teacher's guide for free here.
It's a mixtape for The Order of Odd-Fish. Listen to a stream of the songs I chose for an imaginary "movie soundtrack" for Odd-Fish, and read why I chose them. Lots of different stuff: French ye-ye, Kinshasa street bands, pseudo-classical, puzzling blippity-bloopity music, and more.
I used to be in a band called Brilliant Pebbles. We had been variously described as "melodramatic video game music," "moon-man opera," and "gypsy sex metal." It's over now, but I loved being in this band.
Email: kennedyjames [at] gmail [dot] com
Twitter: @iamjameskennedy
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