Toad, Katherine Dunn
Toad, Katherine Dunn
List: $26.99 | Sale: $18.89
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Toad
A Novel

Author: Katherine Dunn, Molly Crabapple

Narrator: Christina Delaine

Unabridged: 11 hr 49 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 11/01/2022


Synopsis

"Delaine has the perfect deadpan narration that conveys the hopelessness of our protagonist."- Booklist

Sally Gunnar has withdrawn from the world.

She spends her days alone at home, reading drugstore mysteries, polishing the doorknobs, waxing the floors. Her only companions are a vase of goldfish, a garden toad, and the door-to-door salesman who sells her cleaning supplies once a month. She broods over her deepest regrets: her blighted romances with self-important men, her lifelong struggle to feel at home in her own body, and her wayward early twenties, when she was a fish out of water among a group of eccentric, privileged young people at a liberal arts college. There was Sam, an unabashed collector of other people’s stories; Carlotta, a troubled free spirit; and Rennel, a self-obsessed philosophy student. Self-deprecating and sardonic, Sally recounts their misadventures, up to the tragedy that tore them apart.

Colorful, crass, and profound, Toad is Katherine Dunn’s ode to her time as a student at Reed College in the late 1960s. It is filled with the same mordant observations about the darkest aspects of human nature that made Geek Love a cult classic and Dunn a misfit hero. Daring and bizarre, Toad demonstrates her genius for black humor and her ecstatic celebration of the grotesque. Fifty-some years after it was written, Toad is a timely story about the ravages of womanhood and a powerful addition to the canon of feminist fiction.

A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

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About Katherine Dunn

Katherine Dunn is the author of Geek Love, which was a finalist for the National Book Award and the Bram Stoker Award, as well as the novels Attic and Truck. She was an award-winning boxing journalist whose work appeared in Esquire, KO Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, Playboy, The Ring, Sports Illustrated, and Vogue. Her writing on boxing is collected in One Ring Circus. In 2004, Dunn and the photographer Jim Lommasson won the Dorothea Lange–Paul Taylor Prize for their work on the book Shadow Boxers. Dunn died in 2016.

About Christina Delaine

Christina Delaine is a SOVAS Voice Arts Award and multiple AudioFile Earphones Award-winning narrator who has recorded over 100 audiobooks. She is also an Audie Award nominee. An accomplished stage and voice actor, Delaine has appeared on stages across the country and has voiced scores of commercials and video games.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Lark on October 19, 2023

The novel is small in scope--we are in the mind of a single smart woman who observes everything, and has nothing--but it is a mind so full of wonder and intellectual meanderings and truth that it feels like an epic story. Every sentence gave me a zing--zing--zing! of surprise. Surprising precision o......more

Goodreads review by Jenny on November 04, 2022

This is a very depressing book about depression BUT it's also by Katherine Dunn, author of one of my favorite books ever (Geek Love) and her prose here is gorgeous and brutal and makes me want to scream "HOW DO YOU MAKE IT LOOK SO EASY?" For me, the subject of the book was a 3. But the writing was a......more

Goodreads review by Laurie (barksbooks) on October 07, 2022

I was both nervous and excited to be blessed with an ARC for Toad (thank you kind publisher). Excited because Dunn's GEEK LOVE is a book I consider a masterpiece and one I reread every few years that manages to have the same impact each time I read it. Nervous because I feared my undying love for Ge......more

Goodreads review by Barry on November 17, 2022

not as out there as Geek Love but it does have an equally as scrungy heart. A lot of my foibles with it probably have to do with its existence as a manuscript that was then edited into book form after Dunn had died. the afterword by the editor talks about how she had to make the book more convention......more

Goodreads review by Lori on August 28, 2022

Even though I am out of my covid quarantine, I still feeling fuzzy headed and funky, and while I am no longer reading and reviewing from the confines of my living room couch, I still consider this covd read #6. Lol. Damn the 'Rona! I've had Geek Love on my TBR for a while now and the only reason I le......more


Quotes

"A gentle, funny, heartbreaking indictment of the naïve excesses of the 1960s and the testament of a woman who survived them."
Kirkus, starred review

"A sobering look at the reality of what one’s glory days actually entailed, shot through with the unmistakable undertow of pain and self-loathing."
Publishers Weekly

"With Toad, Katherine Dunn has written a primer for filthy, rhapsodic worship at the altar of the unavoidably real. Both visceral and philosophical, brutal and humane, Toad has the feel of gospel written by an exiled saint. A living, breathing document you don’t so much read as shake its glorious, grimy hand."
—Rachel Yoder, author of Nightbitch

Toad is a gift to those of us who have been dreaming for decades of a new novel from Katherine Dunn, and a book that will bring her many devoted new fans. Nobody’s sentences heave and breathe like Dunn’s do. Her language scintillates and sheds its scales, revealing truths that nobody else dares to utter, or can. She is Portland’s bard of ‘the genuine wound,’ exploring the deep world within the body and the human animal’s capacities for savagery, tenderness, loneliness, friendship, loathing, and love.”
—Karen Russell, Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of Orange World and Other Stories

Toad is, plainly, a masterpiece—a nimble, wry, innovative, and devastating novel. It is painful to know that this novel might have gone unpublished, that Katherine Dunn’s brilliant language and her sly commentary about gender, desire, power, and self-direction might never have reached readers. Toad should join the canon of postwar literature, as well as the literature of counterculture, the literature of women’s inner lives, the literature of the Pacific Northwest, the literature of America itself. It is a gift.”
—Lydia Kiesling, author of The Golden State

“Dark and strange and funny, deeply lived, with a nothing-left-to-lose vibe of radical honesty, Toad is a joy. An unexpected final book from a literary hero, brimming with relatable madness and mendacity, ferocious desire, the fascinating ephemera of connections. Odd and tragic and cool—I loved Toad.”
—Michelle Tea, author of Against Memoir