Shortlisted for the 2021 Firecracker Award for Fiction
Shortlisted for the 2020 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize
Longlisted for the PEN/Hemingway Award for a Debut Novel
A New York Times Editors' Choice
An NPR Favorite Book of 2020
A Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2020
An I-D Best Book of 2020
A Bustle Must-Read Book of 2020
A Thrillist Best Book of 2020
A Tor.com Best Book of 2020
A Refinery29 Best Indie Book of 2020
A Library Journal Best Debut Novel of 2020
“Temporary reads like a comic and mournful Alice in Wonderland set in the gig economy, an eerily precise portrait of ourselves in a cracked mirror.”
—Parul Sehgal, The New York Times
“[A] delirious and deeply humane satire. . . . Temporary has the manic, goofing energy of a lounge act.”
—Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal
“A batty, playful satire, Temporary twists the jargon and anxieties of a millennial gig economy into a dreamscape of spires and scaffolding through which we swing as our narrator seeks out her steadiness.”
—Los Angeles Times
“Leichter has managed to blend the oddball and the existential into a tale of millennial woe that’s both dreadful and hilarious at once.”
—The Washington Post
“[A] deeply hilarious, surreal manifesto against late-stage capitalism, all wrapped up in a mushroom trip.”
—Tim Herrera, The New York Times
“Leichter’s funny, absurdist debut cleverly explores a capitalist society taken to a dreamlike extreme.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Refreshingly original.”
—Chicago Tribune
“Unique, often elusive but always beautifully written.”
-Daily Mail UK
“[Leichter] takes numbing routines to dreamy (or perhaps nightmarish) extremes, delivering subversive entertainment in the process.”
—Entertainment Weekly
“If a Salvador Dali painting were reimagined as a contemporary novel, it would be Leichter’s Temporary.”
—Parade
“Leichter’s voice is lively, practically sprightly, and offers a smart balance to the big question she asks—When everything is considered work, how do we live outside of it?”
—Vulture
“An absurd, laugh-out-loud funny critique of (and antidote to) the dystopia that is late-stage capitalism.”
—BuzzFeed
“A narrative so deliciously allusive and disarmingly literal that this reader kept thinking maximum glee had been attained, only for the glee to somehow grow even more maximal just a few sentences later.”
—Helen Oyeyemi