June 18th, 2009 / 2:23 pm
Author Spotlight

John Dermot Woods’s The Complete Collection of people, places & things

I just ordered this: so too should you: John Dermot Woods’s The Complete Collection of people, places & things, which is surely to be wholly wonderful and grand.

PRE-ORDER SPECIAL!
Order The Complete Collection of people, places & things by July 15 and get it for only $12 (25% off the cover price) with free shipping in the U.S.


EXTRA STUFF FOR THE FIRST 50 PEOPLE WHO ORDER:
– A signed/numbered screen print, commemorating the book’s release

-personalized copy with a limited edition, signed book plate


(be sure to specify your shipping address)

cover-dropshadowThe Complete Collection of people, places & things
a novel by John Dermot Woods
BlazeVOX Books 2009
ISBN: 9781935402466
175 pp. Perfect Bound. With Drawings.

“An accomplished artist and writer, in addition to being an entertaining and often an electrifying one.   John Woods does something very original in his combining of the arts in this collection, and my hat’s off to him in his two-hat achievement.”
— Stephen Dixon


“John Dermot Woods’ Complete Collection thrills the daylights out of me. Every word, every image is infused with vitality. Every place, person and thing breathes and moves. It is an android’s heaven, a manikin’s cocktail party. It reminds me of the Golden Age cartoons where human departure imbues clocks, canned goods, books, statues, toys or brooms with sentience. When we close our eyes our kitchens Jitterbug, our teddy bears waltz. The thing I love most about this world is that while Woods’ imagination is opened full throttle, he provides an almost ethnographical structure to explicate it. His wonderland is so thoroughly startling because of — not in spite of — his ability to make his account as reliable as a Fodor’s travel guide.”
— Reginald McKnight


“John Woods’ The Complete Collection brings the small-town America of Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio into conversation with Italo Calvino’s fake travelogue, Invisible Cities, and that book’s dreamish vision of Imperial China. Like Calvino’s novel, the book evokes a kind of nearly Renaissance-like iconographic worldview of Memory and the Imagination, but one channeled through the disposable world of American children’s toys and comic books. The flat voice is disconcertingly balanced between farce, comedy and deadly seriousness.”
— Johannes Göransson


Excerpts online:

“Benvereen” (Lamination Colony)

“Voltron,” “Game Cartridges,” and “The Dining Car” (La Petite Zine)

“Gargamel” (Pebble Lake Review)

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4 Comments

  1. j. a. tyler

      done and done. looking forward to it.

  2. j. a. tyler

      done and done. looking forward to it.

  3. John Dermot Woods

      Thanks for the mention, Blake. The 50 copies with the print got claimed in less than a day (with the help of this post). So, for those who are still interested, I’ve decided to double the run of the screen prints. First 100 to pre-order get the schwag.

  4. John Dermot Woods

      Thanks for the mention, Blake. The 50 copies with the print got claimed in less than a day (with the help of this post). So, for those who are still interested, I’ve decided to double the run of the screen prints. First 100 to pre-order get the schwag.