American Subversive

Overview

 

As the twenty-first century enters its second decade, foreign wars, the lingering recession and a caustic political environment are taking their toll on Americans. But the party hasn’t ended for Aidan Cole and his friends, a band of savvy–if cynical—New York journalists and bloggers who thrive at the intersection of media and celebrity. At wine-sodden dinner parties or in dimly lit downtown bars, their frenetic talk—of scoops and page views, sexual adventures and trendy restaurants—continues unabated. Then, without warning, the specter of terrorism reenters their lives. A bomb rips through the deserted floor of a midtown office tower.

Middle Eastern terrorists are immediately suspected. But four days later, with no arrests and a city on edge, an anonymous email arrives in Aidan’s inbox. Attached is the photograph of an attractive young white woman, along with a chilling message: “This is Paige Roderick. She’s the one responsible.”

So begins an extraordinary journey into the dark soul of modern America—from a back-to-the-land community in the Smoky Mountains to a Weather Underground-like bomb factory in Vermont; from Fishers Island, isolated getaway of the wealthy elite, to the hip lofts of Manhattan’s Meatpacking District. American Subversive is David Goodwillie’s sharp and penetrating take on the paranoia of our times—and its real, untold dangers. In examining the connection between our collective apathy and the roots of insurrection, Goodwillie has crafted an intoxicating story of two young Americans grasping for a foothold in a culture—and a country—that’s crumbling around them.

Hailed as a “clever, compelling, page-turner” in the Washington Post, Goodwillie’s memoir "Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time" was a “breakout first book” (Elle) and a “searing sketch of a decade in decline” (Louisville Courier-Journal). Now, with his debut novel, David Goodwillie announces himself as a major new voice in American fiction. Expertly written, relentlessly suspenseful, and bitingly funny, "American Subversive" is both an unnervingly realistic tale of domestic terrorism and a perfectly observed portrait of Manhattan in the digital age.

“A triumphant work of fiction.”

— Associated Press

“A rare novel that gets the moment even as we’re living it… A fast-paced, engaging novel of pop-culture and big ideas, authentically subversive, and thoroughly American.”

— The Daily Beast

What critics are saying.

 

“[A] hip and quick-paced literary thriller . . . Goodwillie excels at jet-black social satire in a style reminiscent of Bret Easton Ellis. . . [H]e has written a scathing and hilarious indictment of our bizarre moment in time.”

— The New York Times Book Review

“No one could accuse David Goodwillie of playing it safe in his first novel. . . . The book moves like a potboiler. . . . Sequel, please?”

— Vanity Fair

More Praise for American Subversive


 

“The novel is thoughtful and dead-on in its presentation of our post-recession, digitally obsessed, self-centered and seemingly morally bankrupt culture.”

— USA Today

 

“A new voice has entered the city—youthful, wise, and with an enthralling story to tell. Goodwillie's rendering of an American woman seduced by radicalism skillfully examines the enduring themes of our lives: politics, media, loyalty and love.”

— Gay Talese, author of A Writer's Life

“An incisive depiction of radicalism’s seductive roots . . . Falls somewhere between Bret Easton Ellis’s Glamorama and John Updike’s Terrorist.”

— Publishers Weekly

 

“Definite beach-reading recommendation. . . A genuinely thrilling thriller.”

— The New Yorker

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Purchase the book

“[A] smart, edgy, suspenseful first novel… Goodwillie evokes life underground like a master--the tradecraft, the fraught group dynamics, the combination of discipline and paranoia, the longing for normality.”

— Kirkus Reviews