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These Violent Delights

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A Literary Hub Best Book of Year

  • A Crime Reads Best Debut of the Year
  • A Newsweek 25 Best Fall Books
  • A Philadelphia Inquirer 10 Big Books for the Fall
  • An O Magazine.com LGBTQ Books That Are Changing the Literary Landscape
  • An Electric Lit Most Anticipated Debut
  • A Paperback Paris Best New LGBTQ+ Books To Read This Year Selection
  • A Passport Best Book of the Month

    The Secret History meets Lie with Me in Micah Nemerever's compulsively readable debut novel—a feverishly taut Hitchcockian story about two college students, each with his own troubled past, whose escalating obsession with one another leads to an act of unspeakable violence.

    When Paul enters university in early 1970s Pittsburgh, it's with the hope of moving past the recent death of his father. Sensitive, insecure, and incomprehensible to his grieving family, Paul feels isolated and alone. When he meets the worldly Julian in his freshman ethics class, Paul is immediately drawn to his classmate's effortless charm.

    Paul sees Julian as his sole intellectual equal—an ally against the conventional world he finds so suffocating. Paul will stop at nothing to prove himself worthy of their friendship, because with Julian life is more invigorating than Paul could ever have imagined. But as charismatic as he can choose to be, Julian is also volatile and capriciously cruel, and Paul becomes increasingly afraid that he can never live up to what Julian expects of him.

    As their friendship spirals into all-consuming intimacy, they each learn the lengths to which the other will go in order to stay together, their obsession ultimately hurtling them toward an act of irrevocable violence.

    Unfolding with a propulsive ferocity, These Violent Delights is an exquisitely plotted excavation of the depths of human desire and the darkness it can bring forth in us.

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      • Publisher's Weekly

        July 27, 2020
        Nemerever’s dark, inspired debut depicts a Leopold and Loeb–like thrill killing committed by two gay Jewish college students in 1970s Pittsburgh. Sensitive Paul Fleischer, an artist, comes from a working-class family and is grieving his father’s recent suicide. He easily falls under the spell of Julian Fromme, a rich psychology student who exudes wit and energy. As the young men become lovers, Paul’s family worries about the amount of time he spends with Julian, and his mother pleads with him to hang out with girls, while Paul resigns himself to taking what he can get from the withholding Julian (“If Julian were to love him, it would feel like something he deigned to do. It meant more to be needed”). Julian’s power over Paul becomes more intense after he uses Paul to break free of his own overbearing family. Soon the young men are imagining violent deaths (“How about a Helter Skelter kind of thing, wouldn’t that be fun? We could paint gibberish in blood on the walls,” Julian says), and they work their way up to kidnapping a stranger. The buildup digs into the why as much as the how, allowing Nemerever to chart an enthralling exploration of what drives these young men to violence. Fans of Patricia Highsmith will definitely want to take note of this promising writer. Agent: Caroline Eisenmann, Frances Goldin Literary Agency.

      • Booklist

        August 1, 2020
        Two young men from different backgrounds meet as college freshmen in Pittsburgh in the early 1970s. When the friendship between sensitive, insecure Paul Fleischer and nonchalantly charming Julian Fromme deepens into intimacy tinged with violence and eventually love, Paul's middle-class Jewish grandparents and widowed mother worry about the relationship, even urging Paul toward shiksas. It's different at Julian's family estate, where his father offers to buy Paul off while his mother warns Paul that he's just the latest of Julian's boys. This spawns the pair's fantasy of a house fire that would kill Julian's entire family, a fantasy that morphs into a plan to commit a murder (or, as Julian calls it, an endgame ). Selecting a victim with no ties to either of the two takes time, as does making a detailed plan, which soon is seen as critical to their future happiness. But even the best, most carefully detailed plan can go awry, with unexpected consequences. A debut novel, compelling in its plotting and characterizations, that plumbs emotional depths and evokes Meyer Levin's 1956 classic Compulsion, based on the Leopold and Loeb case.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

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