

Disappear Doppelgänger Disappear
Author: Matthew Salesses
Narrator: Greg Chun
Unabridged: 8 hr 29 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Published: 08/11/2020
Categories: Fiction, Absurdist, Literary Fiction
Author: Matthew Salesses
Narrator: Greg Chun
Unabridged: 8 hr 29 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Published: 08/11/2020
Categories: Fiction, Absurdist, Literary Fiction
Matthew Salesses is the author of The Hundred-Year Flood, an Amazon bestseller and Best Book of September; an Adoptive Families best book of 2015; a Millions Most Anticipated of 2015; and a best book of the season at BuzzFeed, Refinery29, and Gawker, among others. He is also the author of I’m Not Saying, I’m Just Saying and the nonfiction work Different Racisms: On Stereotypes, the Individual, and Asian American Masculinity. Adopted from Korea at age two, Matthew was named by BuzzFeed in 2015 as one of “32 Essential Asian American Writers.”
OK this one demands your attention. I was on top of everything during the first third when Matt Kim feels like he's disappearing. But I took my eye off the ball and slowly started to lose the thread. Is this about the invisibility of being an Asian-American male, the unmoored sentiment of being rais......more
“The use of surrealism to interrogate the erasure of Asian American bodies and the trauma of being disappeared by whiteness is heightened by angled takes on recent history…Salesses’s tale on the nature of existence triumphs with literary trickery.” —Publishers Weekly“Throughout the journey, Salesses challenges and dismantles the model minority myth using the concepts of doubling, disappearance, visibility, and erasure, all with funny and energetic prose (and puns). In this way, Disappear Doppelgänger Disappear points to the intentional and harmful silences lurking in our society” —TriQuarterly“If you’re looking for a story that’s as escapist as it is grounded in today’s world, this one’s for you…Salesses masterfully weaves a story that is at once unrealistic and all too real, exploring Asian stereotypes, white supremacist society, and the nature of self.” —Shondaland