Joe Baumann is the author of three collections of short fiction: Sing With Me at the Edge of Paradise, The Plagues, and Hot Lips. His fiction and essays have appeared in Third Coast, Passages North, Phantom Drift, and many others. He holds a PhD in English from the University of Louisiana-Lafayette. He was a 2019 Lambda Literary Fellow in Fiction. His debut novel, I Know You're Out There Somewhere, is forthcoming from Deep Hearts YA. He can be reached at joebaumann.wordpress.com.
“In his rich, beautiful short story collection, Where Can I Take You When There’s Nowhere To Go, Joe Baumann accentuates the mysteries of human relationships with a skillful and magical hand. Similar to the work of Aimee Bender and Judy Budnitz, Baumann draws readers into intimate spaces, enabling personal connections through the fantastical access he provides—the magical manifestations of grief and loneliness, love and passion, trauma and shame, solidarity, individuality, and the myriad modes of desire. Within this extraordinary collection, individuals evaporate, conjure clouds, consume whole bodies, harbor additional hearts, and produce blood that sings. Baumann’s stories are layered with humor and heavy with the challenges and triumphs of social and self-acceptance. Where Can I Take You When There’s Nowhere To Go is as original as it is enjoyable to read—a rare combination that should be savored and shared as widely as possible.” — Aaron Tillman, author of Consolation Miracles and Every Single Bone in My Brain “In Where Can I Take You When There’s Nowhere To Go, Baumann uses the fantastic to represent with heart-wrenching precision those ‘tangling feelings’ that threaten to destroy his characters. Some evaporate, some sprout roots on their heads, some change into mirrors, and some create clouds with their fingers—not by accident or scientific experiment but because these are phenomena in their worlds that transform and express raw human emotion with determined and sometimes redemptive clarity. Reading this collection means apprehending again and again the hunger of despair, the miracle of love.” — Maria Brandt, author of All the Words