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The Parallel Apartments Hardcover – February 11, 2014

3.4 3.4 out of 5 stars 23 ratings

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Justine Moppett is 34, pregnant, and fleeing an abusive relationship in New York to dig up an even more traumatic childhood in Austin. Waiting for her there is a cast of more than a dozen misfits — a hemophobic aspiring serial killer, a deranged soprano opera singer, a debt-addicted entrepreneur-cum-madam, a matchmaking hermaphrodite — each hurtling toward their own calamities, and, ultimately, toward each other. A Texan Gabriel García Márquez who writes tragicomic twists reminiscent of John Kennedy Toole, Bill Cotter produces some of the most visceral, absurd, and downright hilarious sentences to be found in fiction today. The Parallel Apartments is a bold leap forward for a writer whose protean talents, whose sheer exuberance for language and what a novel can do, marks him as one of the most exciting stylists in America.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Reading Bill Cotter's The Parallel Apartments is like taking some kind of word drug, but a new one, synthesized in a desert lab from molecules of Lipsyte, Dickens, Pynchon, Williams, Chabon, DeWitt, and Joyce, and then spun together with Cotter's own unique particles to yield a book that produces an actual high when read. There's micro-attention paid to sweatpants material and the feel of artificial cheese powder on fingertips and the bouillon smell of nether regions. There is sadness. There is loneliness. There are riffs that make me wish an actor were there to read to me aloud, so I could cry from laughter without needing to clearly see the page. This book is an experience?it is a never-read-anything-like-it-before work of brainy, heartfelt joy." ?Heidi Julavits, author of The Vanishers and The Effect of Living Backwards

"Bill Cotter writes with so much dark wit, such a keen eye for unsettling detail, such a perfect ear for the ways in which his bruised yet hopeful characters think and speak, that the sheer force of his fictional mind took me by surprise.
The Parallel Apartments is an amazing read." ?Tom Barbash, author of Stay Up With Me

"Four generations of Austin women?or five or three, depending on how you count?rivet our attention in this ribald and absolutely compelling novel. Both playfully absurd and absurdly playful,
The Parallel Apartments is full of fresh language, exact observation, and?best of all?an underlying and genuine tenderness." ?Scott Hutchins, author of A Working Theory of Love

"Funny and profane and more than slightly unhinged." ?
Texas Monthly

"Inventive and hilarious, The Parallel Apartments delights in the oddities of people and language. Inhabiting a mesmerizing and unnerving kaleidoscope world, Bill Cotter’s vivid characters turn ?extreme” into the new normal. " ?
Full Stop

"Apartments produces anxiety but ultimately rewards tribulation, recalling at times Updike’s capacity for wringing both pathos and humor from vulnerable circumstances. Cotter’s characters are both endearing and cringe-inducingly maladroit, and he does his best work in the awkwardness created by mishandled moments of human frailty. ? Cotter’s stunningly constructed prose provides comfort from the mayhem." ?
Time Out New York

"Cotter manages to be surreal, gruesome, and snortingly funny. Do yourself a favor and give in to
The Parallel Apartments' gravitational pull."
?
Entertainment Weekly

"By the time you're finished with
The Parallel Apartments ? you're going to want the author to accompany you everywhere for the rest of your life."
?
The Austin Chronicle

"
The Parallel Apartments is difficult to define. One part kooky comedy, one part family drama, one part exploration of womanhood, and one part gruesome catalogue of emotional dysfunction, Cotter’s second novel defies any particular genre, except, perhaps, Cotter’s own."
?
The Texas Observer

?Bill Cotter’s darkly comic stories are powered by his delightfully strange and sometimes disturbing imagination, his empathetic character, and his graceful way with words.” ?
The Rumpus

"Trying to describe
The Parallel Apartments is like trying to pat your head while rubbing your stomach while reciting the alphabet backwards."
?
The Texas Observer

"Cotter has mastered, from the lowest to highest orders, the elements of fiction; his sentences are as grand as the sweeping architectural details of his book's structure."
?
Rain Taxi

About the Author

Bill Cotter was born in Dallas in 1964 and has worked as an antiquarian book dealer and restorer since 2000. He lives in Austin, TX, with the storyteller Annie La Ganga. His first novel was Fever Chart.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ McSweeney's; First Edition (February 11, 2014)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 500 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1938073770
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1938073779
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.91 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 9 x 6.3 x 1.8 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.4 3.4 out of 5 stars 23 ratings

About the author

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Bill Cotter
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Bill Cotter was born in Dallas. His first two novels, Fever Chart (2009) and The Parallel Apartments (2014) were published by McSweeney’s, and his next two, Saint Philomene’s Infirmary for Magical Creatures (January 2018) and The Stone Sky (2019), will be published by Henry Holt. His writing has appeared in The New Orleans Review, The Paris Review, and elsewhere, and an essay for The Believer titled "The Gentleman’s Library" was awarded a Pushcart Prize in 2014. Cotter lives in Austin, where he has just finished a short story collection, and a novel about the lottery titled The Splendid Ticket.

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3.4 out of 5 stars
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2019
    If you haven’t read Fever Chart, stop what you’re doing right now and go get it. It’s one of the best books I’ve ever read.

    If you have read Fever Chart, get ready. This one is going to be just as hilarious, sad, and insightful, while written just as masterfully. When you finish it, you will feel as though you’ve just lived it.
  • Reviewed in the United States on November 27, 2014
    I'm just happy I finished reading it because I was about to give up.

    The would be serial killer was the only character I liked and that's probably saying a lot. I had a lot of problems with the book. It's just a personal thing to me that at a certain point eccentric becomes pathetic and too much of anything is just too much period. And I just think this book could have been scaled back in a lot of ways. Unfortunately content and character would have been the first things I would have scaled back.

    Character- you spend a lot of time with Justine. She leaves a bad relationship in New York to go back to Texas and find out some truths about herself and confront her family. Good start. Unfortunately after talking to like one person she checks into a hotel and spends almost all of the middle of the book eating and having sex or whining about being pregnant while getting more and more pregnant. I pretty much hated Justine.

    The end starts to pull everything together and I actually started to enjoy it (also because I knew it was almost over) but then boom! A horrible act of violence and then a twist that also has to do with a shock pregnancy that I'm sorry I just didn't buy and an ending that made me doubt the characters had learned anything at all and was fairly unbelievable.

    I hate not liking books so I'll just say this one was very, very much not my cup of tea and leave it at that.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2015
    The author has an excellent command of the English language. I really enjoyed his writing style. I thought the story and it's characters were interesting, but the book had way too much sex for my taste.
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2015
    Bill Cotter's universes are intricately created not by flowery language but by the nuances of characters. This book rolls along like a mercilessly hot summer day, at times slow-moving but always with an underlying feeling of imminent visceral plot twists lurking just on the other side of a lazily swinging, open porch gate.
    This novel is a slice of life... If your cake has shattered glass icing and comes from the gutter but damnit, it's your cake and your going to love how it makes you bleed.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2014
    This was brought to my attention by a friend, who said he had read a good review of it. I read constantly, and am at the point in my life where I stop if I'm not enjoying the book. I just gave up; never have HATED a book so much. I've requested a refund.
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2014
    I read quite a bit, and few contemporary authors catch my attention. Don't get me wrong, I've read hundreds of books that are entertaining, funny, or surprising, yet there was not a unique 'voice', like Hemingway, Fitzgerald, or Dickens. Cotter's book, 'Fever Chart' was the first that made me sit up and take notice. 'Fever Chart' completely immerses the reader in a wild ride full of quirky characters and situations that has to be read to be experienced.

    Cotter's second book, Parallel Apartments, confirms that this author has only become more powerful, and is able to create characters that you'll swear are reading over your shoulder. Hilariously funny, sad, and poignant all at once.

    I love this book. I don't normally leave reviews, but this book was an exception.

    RAD
    7 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2015
    Ugh. That's what I get for buying a book simply because it's set in Austin.

    I like modern fiction. This ain't it. This is an author trying way too hard to be trendy.
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2014
    a good plot ruined by a hipster that wants to be 'too exquisite for ordinary readers' Seriously, this writer uses 13 words-mostly 3 syllables- to write 'opening a door'. Paid author reviews have compared him to classic authors, however those writers used prose from their time, and sadly this writer could have made this smart plot so much better by leaving out the 6,625 seldom used words just to be 'an experience'. Simply put -doubtful the author knows that phrase- Its like asking someone the time, and they tell you how to build a clock. I got this as a gift, and now, its a joke between the giver and I because i made her to try to muddle through the pretentious, excessive text to figure out the plot.The Publisher is 'A privately held company with wildly fluctuating resources'. Or in layman's terms 'No publishing house wanted this 496 page book of pretension so they self published' Tear out every other page, and you'll still get the plot, but you'll be free of the 'is that even a word?' headache..
    2 people found this helpful
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