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Bizarro fiction
Literary genre From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Bizarro fiction is a contemporary literary genre which often uses elements of absurdism, satire, and the grotesque, along with pop-surrealism and genre fiction staples, in order to create subversive, weird, and entertaining works. The term was adopted in 2005 by the independent publishing companies Eraserhead Press, Raw Dog Screaming Press, and Afterbirth Books. Much of its community revolves around Eraserhead Press, which is based in Portland, Oregon, and has hosted the annual BizarroCon since 2008. The introduction to the first Bizarro Starter Kit describes Bizarro as "literature's equivalent to the cult section at the video store" and a genre that "strives not only to be strange, but fascinating, thought-provoking, and, above all, fun to read."[1]
According to Rose O'Keefe of Eraserhead Press: "Basically, if an audience enjoys a book or film primarily because of its weirdness, then it is Bizarro. Weirdness might not be the work's only appealing quality, but it is the major one."[2]
In general, Bizarro has more in common with speculative fiction genres (such as science-fiction, fantasy, and horror) than with avant-garde movements (such as Dadaism and surrealism), which readers and critics often associate it with.[3] While the genre may place an emphasis on the cult and outré, it is not without critical praise. Books by authors who have identified or have been identified as Bizarro have been praised by Lloyd Kaufman[4] and Michael Moorcock.[5] Bizarro novels have been finalists for the Philip K. Dick Award,[6][7] the Bram Stoker Award,[8] and the Rhysling Award.[9] A book of Bizarro criticism and theory was named Non-Fiction Book of the Year 2009 by 3:AM Magazine in Paris.[10]
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Origins
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Bizarro literature can trace its roots at least as far back as the foundation of Eraserhead Press in 1999,[11] but the description of the literature as "Bizarro" is a more recent development. Previous terms used to refer to the burgeoning scene include "irreal"[12][13] and "new absurdism",[13] but neither of these was used broadly. On 19 June 2005, Kevin Dole II released "What The Fuck is This All About", a sort of manifesto for the then unnamed genre.[14][15][16] While the essay does not feature the word "Bizarro," subsequent discussion about the essay led to the name as well as the inauguration of the Mondo Bizarro Forum.
In his essay, "The Nab Gets Posthumously Bizarroized",[17] Tom Bradley traces the genre's roots back in literary history to the time of Vladimir Nabokov's "Gogolization," and his cry of despair and horror at having his central nervous system colonized: "...after reading Gogol, one's eyes become Gogolized. One is apt to see bits of his world in the most unexpected places."[18] Bradley claims the Bizarro movement is continuing and fulfilling that Gogolization process, under the name "Bizarroization": "...we have been completing the preposterous project which [Nabokov] took over from Gogol nearly a hundred years ago.."[17] Bradley further asserts that Bizarro writers can trace their spiritual roots back to the letters which Ovid wrote while exiled on the Black Sea.[19][20]
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Response
Author John Skipp and fellow small press author Eden Robins have written in praise of the do it yourself, self-promoting aesthetic.[21][22] Thirdeye Magazine, an online zine, reinforces the perception of Bizarro writing as purposefully absurd.[23] In the io9 article "Independent Publishers Who Are Reinventing The Future," co-editor Charlie Jane Anders praised Bizarro publisher Eraserhead Press as one of her favorite independent presses.[24]
The British magazine Dazed & Confused stated that "The bastard sons of William Burroughs and Dr. Seuss, the underground lit cult of the Bizarros are picking up where the cyberpunks left off."[25]
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Wonderland Book Award
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The Wonderland Book Award honors the best in bizarro fiction each year. The award recognizes two categories: best novel/novella and best short story collection. The award is voted on[26] by bizarro authors and fans, and presented in the fall at BizarroCon.
Best Short Story Collection
2023: All I Want Is to Take Shrooms And Listen to the Color of Nazi Screams - John Baltisberger
2022: The Last 5 Minutes of the Human Race - Michael Allen Rose & Jim Agpalza
2021: Don't Push the Button - John Skipp
2020: Don't F[Bleep]k with the Coloureds - Andre Duza
2019: To Wallow in Ash & Other Sorrows - Sam Richard
2018: Nightmares in Ecstasy - Brendan Vidito
2017: Angel Meat - Laura Lee Bahr
2016: Berzerkoids – Emma Alice Johnson
2015: The Pulse Between Dimensions and the Desert – Rios de la Luz
2014: I'll Fuck Anything that Moves and Stephen Hawking – Violet LeVoit
2013: Time Pimp – Garrett Cook
2012: All-Monster Action – Cody Goodfellow
2011: We Live Inside You – Jeremy Robert Johnson[27]
2010: Lost in Cat Brain Land – Cameron Pierce[28]
2009: Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars – Cody Goodfellow
2008: Rampaging Fuckers of Everything on the Crazy Shitting Planet of the Vomit Atmosphere – Mykle Hansen
2007: 13 Thorns – Gina Ranalli
Best Novel/Novella
2023: Edenville - Sam Rebelein
2022: One Hand to Hold, One Hand to Carve - M. Shaw
2021: Jurassichrist - Michael Allen Rose
2020: The Loop - Jeremy Robert Johnson
2019: Unamerica - Cody Goodfellow
2018: Coyote Songs - Gabino Iglesias
2017: Sip - Brian Allen Carr
2016: I Will Rot Without You – Danger Slater
2015: Skullcrack City – Jeremy Robert Johnson
2014: Dungeons & Drag Queens – Emma Alice Johnson
2013: Motherfucking Sharks – Brian Allen Carr
2012: Space Walrus – Kevin L. Donihe
2011: Haunt – Laura Lee Bahr[27]
2010: By the Time We Leave Here, We'll Be Friends – J. David Osborne[29]
2009: Warrior Wolf Women of the Wasteland – Carlton Mellick III
2008: House of Houses – Kevin L. Donihe[30]
2007: Dr. Identity – D. Harlan Wilson[31]
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Notable Bizarro works
Most notable Bizarro works generally tend to come from the major Bizarro presses, most notably Eraserhead Press. Although there are many books that have qualities of Bizarro, such as William Burroughs' Naked Lunch or Mark Z. Danielewski's House of Leaves, a Bizarro work tends to be defined by its publication inside of the Bizarro scene, from between the years 2001 when the first Carlton Mellick III book was published to the present.
Although Bizarro is a DIY genre that gets little media attention, a notable Bizarro work is often one that has broken past the barriers of the genre and received wider attention in literature and media.
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Authors
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This section needs additional citations for verification. (December 2018) |
- Querus Abuttu[34]
- Andrew Wayne Adams
- David Agranoff
- Forrest Aguirre
- Kirsten Alene Pierce
- Forrest Armstrong
- Michael A. Arnezn
- Ben Arzate
- Brian Auspice
- Steve Aylett
- Laura Lee Bahr
- David W. Barbee
- Duncan B. Barlow
- Edgar J. Barrett
- Maxwell Bauman
- William Bevill[35]
- Amanda Billings
- Vincenzo Bilof
- Lori Bowen
- Christopher Boyle
- Tom Bradley[36]
- Dave Brockie
- G Arthur Brown
- Cullen Bunn
- Jeff Burk[37]
- Justin A. Burnett
- Hugo Camacho Cabeza
- Leza Canotral
- Lance Carbuncle
- Brian Allen Carr
- Nathan Carson
- Shane T. Cartledge
- Adam Cesar
- Autumn Christian
- Michael Cisco
- Alan M. Clark
- Scott Cole
- Edmund Colell
- John Wayne Comunale
- Brendan Connell
- Garrett Cook
- Jase Daniels
- Nicholas Day
- Rios de la Luz
- Robert Devereaux
- Jaime Dunkle
- Andre Duza
- Russel Edson
- Brian Evenson
- Amber Fallon
- Karl Fischer
- Ben Fitts
- Constance Ann Fitzgerald
- Andy de Fonseca
- Eckhard Gerdes[38]
- Garvan Giltinan
- Larissa Glasser
- J. F. Gonzalez
- Matthew T. Granberry
- Devora Gray
- Gerri R. Gray
- Jamie Grefe
- Michael Griffin
- Justin Grimbol
- Nikki Guerlain
- Douglas Hackle
- Mykle Hansen
- Eric Hendrixson
- C.V. Hunt
- Gabino Iglesias
- Alex S. Johnson
- Emma Alice Johnson[39]
- Jeremy Robert Johnson
- Kirk Jones
- Stephen Graham Jones
- Michael Kazepis
- David James Keaton
- Mike Kleine
- John Edward Lawson
- Michael Sean LeSueur
- Edward Lee
- Christopher Lesko
- Marc Levinthal
- D. F. Lewis
- Simon Logan
- Kelby Losack
- Steve Lowe
- Tom Lucas
- Nick Mamatas
- Spike Marlowe
- Eric Mays
- Shane McKenzie
- Chris Meekings
- Carlton Mellick III[40]
- Adam Millard
- Brent Millis
- Jonathan Moon
- Christine Morgan
- Charles Austin Muir
- Kyle Muntz
- Nisio Isin
- Don F. Noble
- Jeff O'Brien
- J David Osborne
- Riley Michael Parker
- Christoph Paul
- William Pauley III
- Cameron Pierce[41]
- Sam Pink
- Pedro Proença
- Andersen Prunty
- Katy Michelle Quinn
- Steven Rage
- Liv Rainey-Smith
- Gina Ranalli
- Tony Rauch
- Dustin Reade
- Matthew Revert
- Sam Richard
- Jason Rizos
- Jennifer Robin
- Tamara Romero
- Michael Allen Rose
- Kris Saknussemm
- Bradley Sands[42]
- Tiffany Scandal[43]
- Michael J. Seidlinger
- Kevin Shamel
- Jeremy C. Shipp
- John Shirley
- Bix Skahill
- John Skipp[44]
- Danger Slater
- Bryan Smith
- Shane Ryan Staley
- Andrew James Stone
- Alyssa Sturgill
- Madeleine Swann
- Kevin Sweeney
- Molly Tanzer
- Bruce Taylor[45]
- Anthony Trevino
- Violet LeVoit[46]
- Brendan Vidito
- Daniel Vlasaty
- Grant Wamack
- J.W. Wargo
- Patrick Wensink
- Wrath James White
- Lee Widener
- Caleb Wilson
- D. Harlan Wilson[47]
- Jason Wuchenich
- Shawn Wunjo
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See also
References
External links
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