Flat Earth by Anika Jade Levy

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Flat Earth by Anika Jade Levy

Literary fiction

Flat Earth

Debut
Early Release

by Anika Jade Levy

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Quick take

In a collapsing society, a writer negotiates relationships, envy, and the commodification of youth, art, and sex.

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Synopsis

Avery is a young woman attending grad school in New York, working on a collection of cultural reports and flailing financially and emotionally. Having grown up in a dysfunctional family, in which she was made to take care of her parents, she now seeks to be taken care of—and even infantilized—which she plays out by dating older men for money, and others for the oblivion their egos offer. In an act of desperation (and possibly hallucination—she had taken a fair amount of Ambien that night) Avery applies for and secures a job at a right wing dating app. The “reports” she is tasked to write for the startup eventually merge with her dissertation, resulting in a metafictional text that reveals itself on these very pages.

Meanwhile, Avery’s best friend Frances, an effortlessly chic emerging filmmaker from a wealthy family in the South, drops out of grad school, gets married, and somehow still manages to finish her first feature Flat Earth. Frances’ triumphant return to New York as the toast of the art world and literati sends Avery on a final tailspin, pushing her to make some of her most devastating decisions, but also ultimately bringing her back to her authentic self.

Flat Earth is a coming-of-age story about America and about New York, a metafictional novel about transactionality, conspiracy theories, mimetic desire, and the difficulties of female friendship that’s as sharp and ironic as it is sneakily heartbreaking.

Content warning

This book contains scenes depicting self-harm and mentions of sexual assault, suicide, and miscarriage.

Read a sample

Get an early look from the first pages of Flat Earth.

Flat Earth

I

In California, we met a young man who had walked from Colorado to the Central Valley to attend the music festival Lightning in a Bottle. He had short, dirty, uneven hair, as if it had been dreaded and then undreaded to adapt to changing cultural attitudes. He carried a long metal pipe, which he told us was a catalytic converter he planned to sell to pay for his ticket home.

My best friend Frances and I were ostensibly in graduate school—media studies. I was supposed to be writing a book of cultural reports, but it wasn’t taking shape. I never excelled at anything academically, and my average intelligence embarrassed me. Frances was filming an experimental documentary about rural isolation and right-wing conspiracy theories. Since I was addicted to prescription stimulants and incapable of working on my own project without them, I spent that summer following Frances around the country while she shot her movie, taking handheld footage of postindustrial towns ravaged by QAnon and synthetic opioids and dead factories. Even if it didn’t make any sense, the footage was beautiful: homeless encampments and cannabis dispensaries blooming in the ruins of the Rust Belt. I was surprised by Frances’s burst of visionary interest in America—she’d spent the last six years insisting that the center of the country was all slaughterhouses—but she had a way of anticipating cultural tides, spotting telegenic potential in decay. I must have known, even then, that Frances’s project was more important than mine. I envied her clarity of vision, the inevitability of her success. I would have followed her anywhere.

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