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Columbia University Press

People's Choice Literature

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Title

Title: People's Choice Literature
Author: Tom Comitta
ISBN: 9780231219280
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Published: 2025
Binding: Paperback
Language: English
Condition Note: New from the publisher
Fiction: 1686389
Section: Literary Criticism | Novel as Form
Publisher Description:

What do Americans truly want in a novel? What would it look like if their preferences and aversions materialized in book form? In People's Choice Literature, Tom Comitta has taken up this challenge, writing two groundbreaking novels based on a nationwide poll about literary taste--one featuring the story elements Americans most desire and another containing everything Americans despise.

The Most Wanted Novel is a fast-paced thriller evoking page-turners by Dan Brown, David Baldacci, and Janet Evanovich. It follows a California woman pulled into a tech tycoon's apocalyptic ambitions after her brother's kidnapping, teaming up with a hunky FBI agent with a tragic past. The Most Unwanted Novel is a genre-bending doorstopper: an epistolary Christmas novel set on a near-future Mars, where elderly aristocratic tennis players scour the globe for lost love, venturing from the coldest of arctic wastelands to the darkest caverns of the macabre. Variously recalling Kathy Acker, César Aira, and Philip K. Dick, it features sentient robots, talking animals, and a hundred-page collection of horror stories.

People's Choice Literature is inspired by the artists Komar and Melamid, who created two now-infamous paintings based on opinion polling. A similar experiment by Dave Soldier produced "The Most Wanted Song" and "The Most Unwanted Song." Comitta has adapted these methods to fiction, drawing on readers' preferences about everything from genre to verb tense to characters' identity, and incorporating machine learning data and passages written in collaboration with a large language model. Audacious and shockingly entertaining, People's Choice Literature also asks big questions about taste, authorship, and the notion of "good writing."