Adam Levinâs debut novel, The Instructions, published by McSweeneyâs in 2010, arrived with a lot of buzz. An inventive, experimental book of over 1000 pages, its protagonist was Gurion ben-Judah Maccabee, a 10-year-old genius from Chicago, who may or may not be the Jewish Messiah. Levinâs short stories have appeared in Tin House, McSweeneyâs, and Esquire. He was the winner of the New York Public Libraryâs Young Lions Award and the 2004 Joyce Carol Oates Fiction Prize, among others. He lives in Chicago, where he teaches Creative Writing at the School of the Art Institute and talks today, with host David Naimon, about his much-anticipated follow-up to The Instructions, his short story collection Hot Pink.
âFrom walls that ooze unnameable, unidentifiable gel, through makers of childrenâs dolls designed to mimic the stages of digestive health, to old widowers in retirement looking back over their marriages, Levin manages to find the pathos and humor in living an âordinaryâ existence. Enter his world if you dare!ââThe Jewish Times
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