Reviews
“Lain proves himself adept at dramatizing such decidedly non-whimsical matters as autism, parent-child estrangement, and the quest for individual identity amidst political upheaval.” —James Morrow, author of The Last Witchfinder
“The mark of great writing is how it seeps into your everyday life without you even noticing and becomes part of your reality. This book is all about that spooky, enchanted place between fictions and worlds, and it will seep into your reality too.” —McKenzie Wark, author of A Hacker Manifesto
“Doug Lain’s genius is somehow both uniquely American and international in flavor–alienated, obsessive, strange and touching all at the same time. The surreal emotional landscapes he explores in Billy Moon are simply astonishing.” —M.K .Hobson, author of the Nebula Award finalist novel The Native Star
“Douglas Lain has a great brain. I am hugely impressed with his prospects…” —Jonathan Lethem, New York Times bestselling author
“I don’t know anyone else doing quite what Lain is doing; fascinating work, moving, strikingly honest, powerful.” —Locus
“Doug Lain’s Billy Moon is postmodern SF,
powering past mere science and into a cubist world of strange.
It’s a mash-up of Phil Dick, Francoise Sagan, and Winnie the Pooh, with a jaded Christopher Robin at the heart of the 1968 Paris student revolution.
Billy Moon is moving and profound, with a radically evanescent style.
Just the thing for our new century.” —Rudy Rucker, author of the WARE Tetralogy
“Billy Moon is a beautifully told story gathering within its pages the original Christopher Robin, the Paris strikes of May 1968, the power of dreams, Guy DeBord and children’s toys. In Mr. Lain’s hands this unexpected and truly remarkable combination works in ways I’d not have imagined. Highly recommended!” —Jack Womack, author of Elvissey
“Doug Lain melts reality into this compelling, complex novel of the year the political got personal and the personal got weird. 1968 is today. Read it.” —Eileen Gunn, Nebula award-winning author
“Douglas Lain makes his desires literature. Billy Moon whips the Spectacle into amusing shapes, shaking out cultural icons, political renegades, philosophical bomb throwers, and time-tripping love bandits. In a world ruled by lies, fiction is a basic truth. What better time to turn words into revolution?” —Dennis Perrin, author of Savage Mules: The Democrats and Endless War and Mister Mike: The Man Who Made Comedy Dangerous