Dear Cyborgs (FSG Originals, 2017)

The Millions Most Anticipated of 2017.
Buzzfeed’s Exciting New Books.
Nylon’s Books You’ll Want To Read This Summer.
Nylon’s Best Books of 2017, So Far.
Wired’s Essential Summer Reads.
Tor’s Books We Want to Read Now, Please.
The Village Voice’s Ten Books to Read This Summer.
Chicago Review of Books’ The Best Books of Fiction of 2017 So Far.
The Brooklyn Rail’s Best Books of 2017.
Dennis Cooper’s Mine-for-yours 2017.
Bomb Magazine’s Looking Back on 2017 selection.
Vol. 1 Brooklyn’s 2017 Favorites.

ISBN: 978-0374537111 | FSG Originals

Available at your local independent bookstore & elsewhere.

Review on Goodreads.

___________________________

A fractal fable about the possibility and power of protest as told by three superheroes on their lunch break

In a small Midwestern town, two Asian American boys bond over their outcast status and a mutual love of comic books. Meanwhile, in an alternative or perhaps future universe, a team of superheroes ponders modern society during their time off. Between black-ops missions and rescuing hostages, they swap stories of artistic malaise and muse on the seemingly inescapable grip of market economics.

Gleefully toying with the conventions of the novel, Dear Cyborgs weaves together the story of a friendship’s dissolution with a provocative and lively meditation on protest. Through a series of linked monologues, a surprising cast of characters explores narratives of resistance—protest art, eco-terrorists, Occupy squatters, pyromaniacal militants—and the extent to which any of these can truly withstand the pragmatic demands of contemporary capitalism. All the while, a mysterious cybernetic book of clairvoyance beckons, and trusted allies start to disappear.

Playfully blending comic-book villains with cultural critiques, Eugene Lim’s Dear Cyborgs is a fleet-footed literary exploration of power, friendship, and creativity that recalls authors like Tom McCarthy and Valeria Luiselli. Ambitious and knowing, it braids together hard-boiled detective pulps, subversive philosophy, and Hollywood chase scenes, unfolding like the composites and revelations of a dream.

___________

Dear Cyborgs … blew me away with its deceptively blithe mixture of cryptic humor, philosophical ingenuity, and genuine political yearning. It made me think of Roberto Bolano and Tom McCarthy. I’m hoping to reread it soon for inspiration, and I hope it makes a splash out there in this overcrowded world.
—Jonathan Lethem, The Chicago Review of Books

Eugene Lim’s Dear Cyborgs is a mad badass fan letter to comicdom and a chastening reminder of how America’s greatest fantasy doesn’t involve superheroes with superpowers but the prospect of a fair and honest political life. Go read it in the streets.
—Joshua Cohen

Eugene Lim tells his sly superhero tales in a kind of hard-boiled deadpan—a voice at once incongruously comic and playfully soulful. Beneath the dry wit there’s an ache of loneliness, an echo of every comic-book reader’s yearning for the camaraderie of the super team, the intimate enmity of the nemesis.
—Peter Ho Davies

Eugene Lim’s Dear Cyborgs is a secret tunnel fresh with cool, strange storms. What is it to be super? What is it to be beyond? Dear Cyborgs is rife with mysteries, heroes, even heartache.
—Samantha Hunt

Eugene Lim’s genre-bending Dear Cyborgs … is a smart, inventive, highly unconventional novel that explores themes of resistance, art, capitalism, and contemporary culture.
BuzzFeed

This utterly entrancing novel… a lucid, provocative exploration of contemporary culture and themes like power, money, and friendship.
Nylon

One of the smartest, strangest books I’ve read. This is a document of a side of the Midwest that goes largely uncelebrated: the population of tech-savvy, art-forward, and too often marginalized voices that shape the region’s identity from the edges. Dear Cyborgs is brilliant in its blending of academic investigation and pop-culture tropes, and structurally invigorating from start to finish. I’m not quite sure what to call it, other than a total blast.
—Robert Martin, Midwest Independent Booksellers Association

[A] mind-bending, form-shifting book about superheroes, protest, the art world, Asian American friendship, and the abyss. What’s most striking is how brilliantly (and seamlessly) Lim employs slippery narrative techniques in this novel in stories within conversations within dreams.
—James Yeh, Vice

[An] entertaining reflection on art, resistance, heroes, and villains. . . eerily reflective of our fractured times, darting from subject to subject with the speed of a mouse click. A colorful meditation on friendship and creation nested within a fictional universe.
Kirkus

Two radically different story lines—one involving a short-lived friendship between two Asian-American boys in the Midwest, the other an ongoing philosophical debate amongst a team of superheroes—are cleverly tied together in this short, sly, unorthodox novel… The core relationships, whether they’re between estranged childhood friends or opinionated superhumans, are real and profoundly moving.
Publishers Weekly, starred review

[A] short but important novel.
—Jonathon Sturgeon in The Baffler

I was a few pages from the end of Eugene Lim’s wondrous new novel, Dear Cyborgs, when I flipped back to the beginning and started again… His writing is confident and tranquil; he has a knack for making everyday life seem strange—or, in the case of Dear Cyborgs, for making revolution seem like the most natural thing possible. His writing is transfixing from page to page, filled with digressive meditations on small talk and social protest, superheroes, terrorism, the art world, and the status of being marginal.
—Hua Hsu in The New Yorker

Eugene Lim’s Dear Cyborgs is a novel of ideas, small, elegant ideas about art and protest, and one of the most striking literary works to emerge from the Occupy movement . . . The possible futility, complicity, and co-optation of protest are the ideas Dear Cyborgs circles around without ever giving up on the idea that resistance is essential . . . I had expected the decade’s wave of protests to yield a raft of conventional social novels—some earnest, some satirical, perhaps not a few reactionary—but in Dear Cyborgs Lim has delivered something far more idiosyncratic, intricate, and useful: a novel that resists and subverts conventions at every turn.
—Christian Lorentzen in New York Magazine

In a way, it’s the most lucid book I’ve read lately. All the books I’ve related to lately have basically brought up the question(s) — what are we doing here? What are we party to? What is desirable? What is apt, given that the correct socio-political view is the horrified, baffled, fearful, woke one?
JW McCormack at Electric Lit

I was certainly misled by the superhero element! … I think to write a book about immigrant experience that isn’t about immigrant experience, about superheroes that skews their whole purpose, and about capitalism and resistance that doesn’t succumb to bright-eyed idealism or weary cynicism is quite an achievement.
Rosie Clarke at Electric Lit

Lim’s third novel might be the most delightful read you’ll find all summer . . . Through seamlessly incorporated meditations on political protest and radical art, Dear Cyborgs is an effortless page turner that dares the reader to believe in the power of the imagination.
Anelise Chen at The Village Voice

Dear Cyborgs … sings the tune of language itself, music that Gertrude Stein and Gordon Lish could get behind, wherein the sentence is less a part than a whole unto itself.
—Josh Cook in Virginia Quarterly Review

Dear Cyborgs is stuffed with more complex ideas than many books three times its size.
—Michael Berry in the San Francisco Chronicle

Despite the suggestively sci-fi title, Eugene Lim’s Dear Cyborgs is not a futuristic picaresque about sentimental robots. Rather, it’s about artists and poets and painters, and the glimmers of compassion found between these individuals and their pursuits… A wild and wildly intelligent work, Dear Cyborgs skillfully employs elements of essay, noir, fantasy, and pop in order to question the limitations of identity in the Internet age.
—Robert Martin in Rain Taxi

Dear Cyborgs is as daring and exciting as it is thoughtful, and perhaps disheartening only because of the context in which it exists.
—Thomas Michael Duncan in Necessary Fiction

Eugene Lim’s slim, haunting new novel, Dear Cyborgs… should vault him into the first rank of American writers.
—Ross Barkan in The Village Voice

Dear Cyborgs is a novel about art and resistance, and how they may spur each other on, or frustrate their respective goals. In structure it resembles the great mid-century metafictions . . . Eugene Lim’s super-comrades, with their cultural disaffection and nuanced political opinions, offer a rather more compelling version of a collective consciousness.
—David Hobbs in the Times Literary Supplement

It’s like nothing else you’ll read this year: a bold, thought-provoking novel that unfolds in unpredictable ways.
Vol 1. Brooklyn

In Lim’s work, nothing makes sense except for the sharp absurdity of living within capitalism, and the real threads of resistance that worm their way out of our fantastical, perhaps even delusional visions for a better world. Built out of the crime scene of our past decade, Dear Cyborgs is a book of perfect illogic that I’m grateful will sustain me through the next.
—Trisha Low in Vogue

Dear Cyborgs by Eugene Lim is very very very special and makes you feel like you’re trapped in the Windows 95 screensaver maze but with other people and they tell good stories
Tavi Gevinson

Eugene Lim’s Dear Cyborgs is a novel of the future. It’s surprising, and—while giving despair its full measure—it’s surprisingly inspiring. A Bolano-esque labyrinth of shaggy dog stories flow through the narrator, describing the existential and physical conditions of a present in which it’s easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism, but it’s written in calm and succinct, elegant prose.
—Chris Kraus in Bomb Magazine


Scroll to Top