Books By
Mike Feder
(The Talking Cure and New York Son)
Books by Mike Feder
The Talking Cure
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Mike Feder spent his childhood caring for his mentally ill mother by telling her stories about a world she was too fragile to explore herself. From then on, the darkness of insanity and the connective power of storytelling would form the poles of his life.
Feder learned, as the host of his own radio show, to exorcise his demons through storytelling and performance. His favorite topics: ance. His favorite topics: obs, failed marriage, psychiatrists, and reluctant fatherhood. Feder tackles all of that here, and takes the reader on a journey from the inside of a mental institution, where he learned that he was not as crazy as he thought, to inside radical radio at WBAI (Pacifica) in the '60s, when the whole world seemed to go insane. He describes his success as a monologuist, after being the subject of a front-page New York Times feature, and the downside of that success, the awkward Hollywood shmooze-fests and grandiose expectations which left him feeling more alienated than before.
Feder is a veteran storyteller who looks unsparingly at his own foibles and frailties, here in his scorching and hilarious story.
"A lovely tale of creative coping. A grippingly honest, good read" -- Spalding Gray
New York Son
One night seven years ago, a WBAI radio announcer named Mike Feder had a dream about his late father, who was coming at him with a butcher knife and saying, "You're not going to talk about me on the radio!" The next day Mike Feder told his listeners about that dream and about his father. The astounding response to his story launched him on a career that has made him one of America's most valuable storytellers.
Hailed for his weekly radio show and his frequent stage performances of his stories, Mike Feder has been compared to Woody Allen, Garrison Keillor, Philip Roth, Jean Shepard, and Scheherazade. In the words of the New York Times, his stories "negotiate the frontier between hopelessness and belief, fatalbelief, fatalNow the funniest and most moving of those stories have been collected in New York Son.
Mike Feder writes about growing up and growing wise in the world's most complicated city. Turning his own roller-coaster life into the stuff of wit and fiction, he tells of life in Queens with a suicidal mother and a father who was as rough and peripatetic as Ernest Hemingway. His stories about his parents, and of coming to terms with their dark legacies, are triumphs of love and growth. In "Here's Herbie," another story of growing up, a retarded kid dares to pretend to "drive" a subway train in a way the uptight Mike Feder can only envy. "The Hospital" is a scary yet strangely tender story of Mike's emotional slide some twenty years ago into a hospital psychiatric ward... and how he manged to climb back into the "normal" world of New York. "Marilyn" traces Mike's twenty-five-year nonromance with a "bad girl" from his Queens neighborhood.
In the stories that round out the book, Mike comes full circle: The New York son becomes a New York father. Happily married, Mike endures work as a paralegal in a law firm at once hila firm at once hila neurotic and unnervingly typical. In "Hollywood and Bust," Mike makes it less than big as a screenwriter and learns to survive without a car phone.
New Yorker, romancer, raconteur, son and father--Mike Feder is al these things. His stories in New York Son make up a handbook to the hard work of trying to be happy.
"Mike Feder writes with the greatest gift New York City can give anyone who survives it: a sense of humor. This book will make you laugh with your heart"-- Spalding Gray
"I may be a son of the British Empire, but I have walked many of the same paths as Mike Feder, New York Son. I appreciate how he invites his readers to laugh at his sufferings--like Woody Allen, but more mortal, more human."-- Quentin Crisp
"One hears echos of Woody Allen and Philip Roth, with a touch of Mark Twain holding it all together."-- THE PITTSBURGH PRESS
"[Mike Feder] just talks without aer] just talks without aou laugh... and then you realize he has a poet's master plan."-- Gene Wilder
"Reading these monologues / stories by Mike Feder is like being stuck between stations on the subway with an insane--and possibly dangerous--individual who turns out to be not only funny, likable, and intelligent, but eager to turn himself inside-out for your entertainment."-- KIRKUS REVIEWS
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