The Skrat Prize Memorial Anthology is R. M. Strauss's debut and the 2017 winner of the Kenneth Patchen Award for the Innovative Novel. It remains his only book in print.
Its narrator is Dr. Michael...
Mouth is Charles Hood's novel, illustrated throughout by Christine Mugnolo, and the only work of fiction Hood has published. The premise is small and unstable: two lovers at the entrance to a fragi...
The Darkness Starts Up Where You Stand holds a specific place in the press's history: it was the first book Depth Charge published by someone other than Eckhard Gerdes. Persis Gerdes did the cover ...
Apostrophe/Parenthesis opens Frederick Mark Kramer's New York cycle. The book introduces Federigo, an imagined grandson of Robert Musil's Man Without Qualities, who spends some twenty years trying ...
Ambiguity is the second novel in Frederick Mark Kramer's New York cycle, following Apostrophe/Parenthesis by a year.
The book is built around its narrator, Darko, and the metaphor of the pneuma — w...
Prism and Graded Monotony is the earlier of Dominic Ward's two JEF novels, and the more associative. The publisher's own description calls it a plurality of threads in which death and survival are ...
Othello Blues is the one novel on JEF's Harold Jaffe shelf with two lives: first published by FictionNet in 1996, then revised and reissued by JEF Books in 2014. The reissue is the version the pres...
Meanwhile is the third novel in Frederick Mark Kramer's New York cycle, after Apostrophe/Parenthesis and Ambiguity.
It follows Mario, a Jewish immigrant, navigating the city and reconciling with hi...
Tar Spackled Banner, subtitled A Sequel/Prequel to Arboretum, presents itself as the autobiography of a 21st-century time traveler, written under the in-book persona of J. A. Ellis. Another Billy P...
You Are Make Very Important Bathtime is David Moscovich's flash-fiction novel and an anthropology of self-exoticism: a celebration of cultural misunderstanding set in Southern Japan, where an expat...
Minnows: A Shattered Novel was built by hand before it was written down. Jonathan Lyons cut his draft into blocks and columns, pinned the fragments across the walls of his basement, and reassembled...
The third book of Tarnawsky's Placebo Effect Trilogy, the five mininovels that close out a cycle of fifteen. The form was his own: compressed prose that reaches the scale of a novel through what he...