The Jokes
We sit, hunched over the words that appear on our smartphone screens, altogether unaware of the story of our lives that is going on around us, even as we focus on the minutiae of our social media "friends'" daily activities. These are the stories that draw our undivided attention, and these are the types of deftly observed, wholly engrossing narratives that make up Stephen Thomas's debut flash-fiction collection, The Jokes.

Presented in the form of a most common present-tense--as a series of moments in a social-media-like 'feed'--this collection of very short stories riffs on the form of 'the joke,' but as this might be understood by the best culture-critical comedians of our time: Andy Kaufman, Stephen Wright, Norm McDonald, Jon Stewart, Richard Pryor. And much like those stand-up artists who sanctified the joke-form, these stories deal with sometimes-intense subjects, yet with a kind of SSRI-like placidity that allows readers to cling to each word as the narratives unfold.

In drawing comparisons to Lydia Davis's creatively detached but inventively curious writing, Thomas's The Jokes is a book for thinkers; sad and funny, hopeful and determined, nostalgic and cerebral, these vignettes offer a very personal, yet amazingly relatable entry-point into big ideas that trouble our times--religion, sexuality, life and death, and ways of being in the world--all while coloured by touches of weird otherworldliness that living in someone else's social-media feed can bring.

Fans of metafiction and philosophy, 'alt lit,' artist and academics (particularly students of art history and theory), readers interested in experimental and somewhat cerebral fiction in the vein of Ben Marcus, Lily Hoang, or Maggie Nelson, as well as audiences interested in the uses and abuses of Internet and social media, will connect with Thomas's particular take on worlds within worlds.

"Lydia Davis and Etgar Keret move in together and decide to adopt a son. They settle on Stephen Thomas. He has a pithy style and a funny bone. Years later, at the launch of his book The Jokes, Stephen reads a little story. It packs a novel's worth of material into two short paragraphs. At the back of the room, sipping their red wine, Lydia and Etgar beam." -- Neil Smith, author of Boo

"Stephen Thomas is a writer who's smart, thoughtful, engaging, but also mischievous, like a little kid who knows he shouldn't misbehave, but does it anyway. His debut collection, The Jokes, feels to me like an absent-minded Lydia Davis trying to write deadpan comedy skits for Cartoon Network's Tim & Eric. It's anti-humour that's actually funny, sketches in which nothing is ever resolved, mini-stories that start at Point A and then seem to forget what they were even talking about. This is a book full of surprises." --Guillaume Morissette, author of New Tab
1123208509
The Jokes
We sit, hunched over the words that appear on our smartphone screens, altogether unaware of the story of our lives that is going on around us, even as we focus on the minutiae of our social media "friends'" daily activities. These are the stories that draw our undivided attention, and these are the types of deftly observed, wholly engrossing narratives that make up Stephen Thomas's debut flash-fiction collection, The Jokes.

Presented in the form of a most common present-tense--as a series of moments in a social-media-like 'feed'--this collection of very short stories riffs on the form of 'the joke,' but as this might be understood by the best culture-critical comedians of our time: Andy Kaufman, Stephen Wright, Norm McDonald, Jon Stewart, Richard Pryor. And much like those stand-up artists who sanctified the joke-form, these stories deal with sometimes-intense subjects, yet with a kind of SSRI-like placidity that allows readers to cling to each word as the narratives unfold.

In drawing comparisons to Lydia Davis's creatively detached but inventively curious writing, Thomas's The Jokes is a book for thinkers; sad and funny, hopeful and determined, nostalgic and cerebral, these vignettes offer a very personal, yet amazingly relatable entry-point into big ideas that trouble our times--religion, sexuality, life and death, and ways of being in the world--all while coloured by touches of weird otherworldliness that living in someone else's social-media feed can bring.

Fans of metafiction and philosophy, 'alt lit,' artist and academics (particularly students of art history and theory), readers interested in experimental and somewhat cerebral fiction in the vein of Ben Marcus, Lily Hoang, or Maggie Nelson, as well as audiences interested in the uses and abuses of Internet and social media, will connect with Thomas's particular take on worlds within worlds.

"Lydia Davis and Etgar Keret move in together and decide to adopt a son. They settle on Stephen Thomas. He has a pithy style and a funny bone. Years later, at the launch of his book The Jokes, Stephen reads a little story. It packs a novel's worth of material into two short paragraphs. At the back of the room, sipping their red wine, Lydia and Etgar beam." -- Neil Smith, author of Boo

"Stephen Thomas is a writer who's smart, thoughtful, engaging, but also mischievous, like a little kid who knows he shouldn't misbehave, but does it anyway. His debut collection, The Jokes, feels to me like an absent-minded Lydia Davis trying to write deadpan comedy skits for Cartoon Network's Tim & Eric. It's anti-humour that's actually funny, sketches in which nothing is ever resolved, mini-stories that start at Point A and then seem to forget what they were even talking about. This is a book full of surprises." --Guillaume Morissette, author of New Tab
11.49 In Stock
The Jokes

The Jokes

by Stephen Thomas
The Jokes

The Jokes

by Stephen Thomas

eBook

$11.49  $14.99 Save 23% Current price is $11.49, Original price is $14.99. You Save 23%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

We sit, hunched over the words that appear on our smartphone screens, altogether unaware of the story of our lives that is going on around us, even as we focus on the minutiae of our social media "friends'" daily activities. These are the stories that draw our undivided attention, and these are the types of deftly observed, wholly engrossing narratives that make up Stephen Thomas's debut flash-fiction collection, The Jokes.

Presented in the form of a most common present-tense--as a series of moments in a social-media-like 'feed'--this collection of very short stories riffs on the form of 'the joke,' but as this might be understood by the best culture-critical comedians of our time: Andy Kaufman, Stephen Wright, Norm McDonald, Jon Stewart, Richard Pryor. And much like those stand-up artists who sanctified the joke-form, these stories deal with sometimes-intense subjects, yet with a kind of SSRI-like placidity that allows readers to cling to each word as the narratives unfold.

In drawing comparisons to Lydia Davis's creatively detached but inventively curious writing, Thomas's The Jokes is a book for thinkers; sad and funny, hopeful and determined, nostalgic and cerebral, these vignettes offer a very personal, yet amazingly relatable entry-point into big ideas that trouble our times--religion, sexuality, life and death, and ways of being in the world--all while coloured by touches of weird otherworldliness that living in someone else's social-media feed can bring.

Fans of metafiction and philosophy, 'alt lit,' artist and academics (particularly students of art history and theory), readers interested in experimental and somewhat cerebral fiction in the vein of Ben Marcus, Lily Hoang, or Maggie Nelson, as well as audiences interested in the uses and abuses of Internet and social media, will connect with Thomas's particular take on worlds within worlds.

"Lydia Davis and Etgar Keret move in together and decide to adopt a son. They settle on Stephen Thomas. He has a pithy style and a funny bone. Years later, at the launch of his book The Jokes, Stephen reads a little story. It packs a novel's worth of material into two short paragraphs. At the back of the room, sipping their red wine, Lydia and Etgar beam." -- Neil Smith, author of Boo

"Stephen Thomas is a writer who's smart, thoughtful, engaging, but also mischievous, like a little kid who knows he shouldn't misbehave, but does it anyway. His debut collection, The Jokes, feels to me like an absent-minded Lydia Davis trying to write deadpan comedy skits for Cartoon Network's Tim & Eric. It's anti-humour that's actually funny, sketches in which nothing is ever resolved, mini-stories that start at Point A and then seem to forget what they were even talking about. This is a book full of surprises." --Guillaume Morissette, author of New Tab

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781771662079
Publisher: Book*hug Press
Publication date: 03/29/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 152
File size: 981 KB

About the Author

STEPHEN THOMAS is a Toronto-based writer of fiction, nonfiction, plays, and Facebook statuses. His work has appeared in numerous publications, including Hazlitt, Playboy, The Atlantic's CityLab blog, DIAGRAM, Little Brother, The Seneca Review, The Fanzine, The Puritan, and Definitely Not the Opera (CBC-Radio One). He has been awarded a Truman Capote Scholarship, an Edward F. Albee Fellowship (Summer 2012), has been nominated for the Journey Prize (2010, 2013), a National Magazine Award (2015), and Best American Experimental Writing (2015). The Jokes was shortlisted for the Metatron Prize for Rising Authors of Contemporary Literature, and is Thomas's debut flash-fiction collection.

Table of Contents

1

Taken 15

The fail 16

One principle 17

The snake 19

Joined a band 20

Beach sounds 21

The miracle 23

Jesus hernandez-browne 24

Day 25

A fine balance 27

Visitation 28

The fear 29

A little story 31

Flowers for grandma 32

A simple country girl 33

The balloon 35

In the hagia sophia 36

On this day in history 37

Presidential graves 39

2

Two girls 43

Beer 44

Ethnic joke 45

A hero of a tale 47

Sandbox 48

In the company of others 49

The demon 51

Very strong men 52

The pressure at the bottom of the ocean 53

Edward 55

The voyage of monsieur ronflé 56

Weekend 57

A one and a two

The piercing 61

Things 62

The motives 63

Tree

One path to the lake 67

Extraordinary lives 68

I can't even remember 69

The moon 71

Fishing 72

Mr. death 73

The deep 75

Lost at the zoo 76

Coming of age 77

Milestones

The wait 81

In perpetuity 82

The liffey 83

The shiny metal bunny, Part 1 85

The shiny metal bunny, Part 2 86

The shiny metal bunny, Part 3 87

My family

Will 91

Atlantis 92

Wendy's 93

Zombie attack 95

The crow 96

Some things are hard to talk about

The ethicists 101

Unmarried 102

Somewhere in the world 103

Scenes

Lovebirds 107

Metamorphoses 108

Tsunami 109

Ikea 111

The priest and the sex worker 112

Oasis 113

Stuart 115

America's next top model 116

Afterlife 117

Baby 119

Knock knock 120

Dead baby joke 122

The end

Murder 127

Asleep at the wheel 128

The mural at cowan 129

The discipline

Art 133

The jogger's vision 134

Learning how to live 135

The angel of mercy 137

Behind the scenes 138

The suicide blogger 139

The director 141

The thinker 142

A good place 143

The dancers 145

In 146

Fragile courage 147

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews