Creative Types Audiobook By Tom Bissell cover art

Creative Types

and Other Stories

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Creative Types

By: Tom Bissell
Narrated by: Trisha Miller, Kasey Mahaffy
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From the best-selling coauthor of The Disaster Artist and “one of America's best and most interesting writers" (Stephen King), a new collection of stories that range from laugh-out-loud funny to disturbingly dark—unflinching portraits of women and men struggling to bridge the gap between art and life

A young and ingratiating assistant to a movie star makes a blunder that puts his boss and a major studio at grave risk. A long-married couple hires an escort for a threesome in order to rejuvenate their relationship. An assistant at a prestigious literary journal reconnects with a middle school frenemy and finds that his carefully constructed world of refinement cannot protect him from his past. A Bush administration lawyer wakes up on an abandoned airplane, trapped in a nightmare of his own making.

In these and other stories, Tom Bissell vividly renders the complex worlds of characters on the brink of artistic and personal crises—writers, video-game developers, actors, and other creative types who see things slightly differently from the rest of us. With its surreal, poignant, and sometimes squirm-inducing stories, Creative Types is a brilliant new offering from one the most versatile and talented writers working in America today.

Anthologies Anthologies & Short Stories Fiction Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Literature & Fiction Psychological Short Stories
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Many of the characters in the short stories in “Creative Types“ are a little self-centered, a little self-important and a little lost. But they are all intriguing, and as each story ended, I wanted to know more about them. What happened next? Many of the characters could have centered a good novel. I liked the publisher’s assistant in “Punishment,” who hosts his now-wealthy high school buddy in Manhattan and regrets the old days, when they brutally bullied weaker boys in their midwestern town. I liked the Estonian girl with the vicious dog in “Love Story, with Cocaine,” whose relationship issues aren’t nearly as bad as those of the boyfriend who seemed, to me, to be modeled after the author. And I liked the personal assistant to a famous actor (well, it’s James Franco) dealing with studio censorship of his monologue for Saturday Night Live. All the stories were original and clever. Tom Bissell is a strong, colorful writer with some great imagery. I hope he writes a novel someday.

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