Slow Guillotine

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A01=Teo Rivera-Dundas
Animals in Literature
art and literature
art industry
Author_Teo Rivera-Dundas
autofiction
award winning fiction
award winning novel
Barbara DiBernard Prize in Fiction winner
bildungsroman structure
book about service industry workers
book for arts workers
book for Dirtbag leftist
book for Millennial readers
book for queer punks
Category=FBA
Category=FC
Category=FXR
Category=JBSD
coming of age story
contemporary fiction
Contemporary Queer Literature
Creative Works
Creative Writing
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_modern-contemporary
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fiction
fiction about art
fiction set in New York City
Gay &
gay fiction
impact of structural violence on the body
Labor Studies
Lesbian Studies
LGBTQ fiction
literary fiction
Post-911 American Literature
queer fiction
struggle under capitalism

Product details

  • ISBN 9781496247315
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Mar 2026
  • Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Winner of the Barbara DiBernard Prize in Fiction

Slow Guillotine follows three broke weirdos whose collective desire to make and think about art is constantly interrupted by their art-industry-adjacent minimum-wage jobs. Throughout the novel, the three friends' day jobs in a failing independent bookstore, a sterile gallery in downtown Manhattan, and miscellaneous living rooms across the Long Island birthday-party-clown circuit interweave with their attempts to come to terms with their precarity, gender-dysphoric embodiment, and the floating dream of collective liberation.

Spanning one year and told through an obsessive first-person present tense, Slow Guillotine brings the bildungsroman structure through the autofictional looking glass, questioning how "coming of age" could be feasible in a society of debtors, wage laborers, and renters.

Teo Rivera-Dundas is a writer in western Massachusetts. His work has received support from the Wassaic Project, Anderson Center at Tower View, California Institute of the Arts, and the University of California, San Diego. His writing has appeared in Gulf Coast, Meridian, Tupelo Quarterly, and Desperate Literature's annual Eleven Stories anthology, among other publications.

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