Winner of the 2012 Believer Book Award
Runner-Up for the 2013 Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature
Finalist for the 2013 James Tait Black Prize in Fiction
Finalist for the 2011 Los Angeles Times Book Prize
Finalist for the New York Public Library’s 2012 Young Lions Fiction Award
A Wall Street Journal Top Ten Fiction of 2011
A Boston Globe Best Novel of 2011
A Guardian Best Book of 2011
A Shelf Unbound Top Ten Book of 2011
A Literary Hub Best Contemporary Novel
“Ben Lerner’s remarkable first novel . . . is a bildungsroman and meditation and slacker tale fused by a precise, reflective and darkly comic voice. It is also a revealing study of what it's like to be a young American abroad.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“One of the funniest (and truest) novels I know of by a writer of his generation. . . . A dazzlingly good novel.”
—New York Review of Books
“A subtle, sinuous, and very funny first novel.”
—The New Yorker
“Flip, hip, smart, and very funny. . . . Reading it was unlike any other novel-reading experience I’ve had for a long time.”
—Maureen Corrigan, NPR
“A remarkable first novel. . . . Intensely and unusually brilliant.”
—The Guardian
“Utterly charming. Lerner’s self-hating, lying, overmedicated, brilliant fool of a hero is a memorable character, and his voice speaks with a music distinctly and hilariously all his own.”
—Paul Auster
“A marvelous novel, not least because of the magical way that it reverses the postmodernist spell, transmuting a fraudulent figure into a fully dimensional and compelling character.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“A darkly hilarious examination of just how self-conscious, miserable, and absurd one man can be.”
—Deb Olin Unferth, Bookforum
“A post-MFA The Catcher in the Rye for professional adolescents.”
—San Diego CityBeat
“The combination of tension and languor, grounded by sensual details, recalls Javier Marías.”
—Time Out New York
“An extraordinary novel about the intersections of art and reality in contemporary life.”
—John Ashbery
“The sharpest and funniest novel I read this year.”
—The Daily Mail
“Leaving the Atocha Station gets to the heart of this fact of our existence. It captures the complex relationship we have with art, with faith, with love, and with life, and it does so with wit, honesty and grace.”
—HuffPost