The Quorum

Front Cover
Twisted Spoon Press, 2005 - Fiction - 193 pages
Because we shouldn't believe in nations, because we have forsaken our traditions or our traditions have forsaken us, because only individuals matter to those who happen to be one ... because everyone has their own voice and we're all speaking at once, connected through a disconnect and yet still insisting on our fundamental differences, that we're special, marked by virtue of our sheer existence ... Because of all these paradoxes -- screaming into each other through any ear and enacting a love-death in the gray middle -- how can we truly expect to listen when we want only to be heard? But what is there to say that hasn't already been ignored? -- these are some of the ideas that this book does not address.

Joshua Cohen has performed in-depth investigations into mirrors and navels to return with The Quorum, his first collection of short fiction. A set of ten stories, a set of dreams, and a long monologue, these are all first-person rants given over by the somehow alienated, individuals seeking only a sympathetic hearing, all dealing with identity and religion as well as occupied with technical ideas of reliable narration and the structure of the mind's ear. From a review of a book about the Holocaust that's six-million blank pages to a suicide note from a young university student, from a letter to home outlining an economy based on hair to a eulogy for a poem, from a story narrated by three-hundred concubines to the title story about a group of people who interchange appearances, habits, proclivities and talents, The Quorum is a sensitive and inevitably absurd take on the individual's lifelong quest to get someone, anyone, to listen.

From inside the book

Contents

A Review
13
A Redemption
29
The Quorum or a Report to an Academy
45
Copyright

3 other sections not shown

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2005)

Joshua Cohen was born in 1980 in New Jersey. He lived in Prague for a number of years, working as a journalist, essayist and editor for many publications, including the Prague Pill, Prague Literary Review, Czech Business Weekly, and Aufbau. His fiction has appeared in many journals -- such as Sleeping Fish, Fiction Warehouse, Zeek -- and anthologies, most recently in Text: UR - The New Book of Masks (Raw Dog Screaming Press, 2007). A recipient of first prize in The Modern Word's 2003 Short Story Contest and short-listed for the Koret Foundation's prestigious 2005 Young Writer on Jewish Themes Award, Cohen now resides in New York, where he is a regular contributor to The Forward. He is the author of A Heaven of Others and Aleph-Bet, An Alphabet for the Perplexed. Cohen was awarded a 2022 Pulitzer Prize for his novel The Netanyahus.

Bibliographic information