Jason Guriel is the author of several collections of poems and a book of essays. His writing has appeared in Slate, The Atlantic, and other magazines. He lives in Toronto.
Praise for Forgotten Work A futuristic dystopian rock novel in rhymed couplets, this rollicking book is as unlikely, audacious and ingenious as the premise suggests. -New York Times A wondrous novel. -Ron Charles, Washington Post This is no novel for fans of 20th-century CanLit's plodding linear plots of settling the land and alcoholism. This one is for the boundary pushers and bohos, jazz snobs with their fanatical attention to minutiae that allows them to feel superior to those who do not know about what Bukowski calls 'the thing!' -Quill & Quire What do you get when you throw John Shade, Nick Drake, Don Juan, Sarah Records, and Philip K. Dick into a rhymed couplet machine? Equal parts memory and forgetting, detritus and elegy, imagination and fancy, Forgotten Work could be the most singular novel-in-verse since Vikram Seth's The Golden Gate. Thanks to Jason Guriel's dexterity in metaphor-making, I found myself stopping and rereading every five lines or so, to affirm my surprise and delight. -Stephen Metcalf This book has no business being as good as it is. Heroic couplets in the twenty-first century? It's not a promising idea, but Forgotten Work is intelligent, fluent, funny, and wholly original. I can't believe it exists. -Christian Wiman Forgotten Work is a novel in rhymed verse, heroically unspooling perfect couplets for almost 200 pages. It's an SF epic poem, an excellent ekphrastic entertainment for English majors, a figment of imagination made real, and the perfect discovery to make for yourself in the hidden corner of your favorite bookstore. -James Crossley, Madison Books This may be the first rock 'n' roll novel written in iambic pentameter ... strange and affectionate, like Almost Famous penned by Shakespeare. A love letter to music in all its myriad iterations. -Kirkus Reviews A feast of allusions-musical, literary, and cinematic-is the book's most entertaining aspect, and it speaks to the powerful currents flowing between artists and artworks across disciplines, as well as to the effect of art on its consumers ... Guriel's bountiful celebration of connections between art finds an inspiring, infectious groove. -Publishers Weekly Praise for Jason Guriel What sets Guriel apart is the inescapable tone of his writing. It's obvious from reading him: he is having fun ... The best of his verse is infused with wit, irony, and the ghosts of his influences. -Quill & Quire Guriel is the consummate stylist, and every poem in Satisfying Clicking Sound has plenty of flourish. -Maisonneuve Like the bumblebee that flies even though it shouldn't be able to, Forgotten Work's amalgam of epic poem, sci-fi novel, and deep dive into rock-fandom gets improbably airborne, a feat attributable not only to its author's large and multifaceted talent, but also to his winning infatuation with the diverse realms his story inhabits. -Literary Matters