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I Know It’s Going to Happen for You Someday
Ten stories about striving for happiness and trying to find a narrow path out of loneliness.
An entire cosmos in a tiny world – atmospheric, laconic, captivating, and featuring numerous headstrong characters you’ll want to get to know better (but not live next door to).
A young man awaits his love with two drinks, and she’s right on time – on TV. A 12-year-old girl doesn’t want to grow up too fast. And a 40-something compulsive hoarder is brought back to life by a woman who seems even sadder than himself.
Ten interlinked stories about survival. About the pursuit of happiness, against all odds, in small-town Kentucky.
Ten ordinary yet unique people – lonely men, women, teenagers – whose lives haven’t turned out the way they imagined them. Who nevertheless struggle for their own small slice of happiness and who can’t wait to escape their backwater town. They may get themselves bloody noses, but they don’t give up. Because they know it’s going to happen for them someday.
Frighteningly brutal, hilarious and moving to tears, I Know It’s Going to Happen for You Someday is the return of one of the most talented writers of our times.
320 pages
2019
978-3-257-07059-0
»It has been a while since an author last wrote such beautiful prose about the loneliness of people lost in a small town, maybe not since Carson McCullers. Joey Goebel strikes a completely new chord with this novel – still funny, but also sensitive and touching.«
»Few people can write as beautifully about loneliness as Joey Goebel.«
»Joey Goebel’s ten short stories deeply move (their) readers. [. . .] The stories are emphatically and intriguingly told.«
»Like none other of his generation Joey Goebel has proved to be an exceedingly musical, highly gifted and visionary chronicler of the American heartland.«
»Goebel, who comes from a small town in Kentucky himself, avoids any cliché and handles his characters with immense love and tenderness.«
»Goebel has empathy for his characters, who are lonely and look for a path to freedom and independence.«
»Joey Goebel’s book is imbued with a great sadness, yet it didn’t leave me in low spirits.«
»Wits against the overly sentimental«