If you think this sounds like Thomas Pynchon or John Calvin Batchelor territory, you would be correct. Slattery's approach walks a tightrope between absurdism and a kind of accentuated Byzantine realism. -- The Believer on Liberation Liberation is a magical, riveting poetic story of a post-economic America.... Slattery's prose style is complex, poetic, visionary and reeling, a cross between Kerouac and Bradbury, salted with Steinbeck.... It's a heady stew, a road novel shot through with mysticism and a love of freedom that soars over the pages. This is a book to fall in love with. -Cory Doctorow Liberation combined the serious and the satirical in creating an unforgettable image of a future America beset by the collapse of the dollar and the specter of a new form of slavery. --Omnivoracious, naming Liberation Amazon.com's #1 SF&F book of 2008 For Fans Of: the surreal odyssey of Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man ; Plan 9 from Outer Space .... For all its colorful characters and gonzo thrills, Slattery's debut is first and foremost a moving portrait of Wendell's griefs. A- -- Entertainment Weekly on Spaceman Blues Slattery's debut is a kaleidoscopic celebration of the immigrant experience.... Pynchon crossed with Steinbeck, painted by Dali impossible to summarize, swinging from the surreal to the hyper-real, a brilliantly handled, tumultuous yarn. -- Kirkus Reviews on Spaceman Blues Early reviews of Spaceman Blues threw around the names of Pynchon, Doctorow, and Dick as stylistic touchstones. But Slattery should really be considered alongside NYC homeboys like Lethem and Shteyngart, the former for his loving tweaks of vintage pulp, the latter for his sharp immigrant comedy. -- The Village Voice