Taylor s memoir is an admirable quest to answer a question that, for many children of parents who struggle against darkness, is almost unanswerable. How do you save a drowning man who doesn t want a life preserver? . . . It s a story told with heart and deep self-reflection, steeped in philosophy and questions about faith. The New York Times Book Review
Taylor jumps back and forth in time, treading carefully and precisely through the delicate territory of his father s suicidal depression, never veering into the sentimental as he works toward understanding. BuzzFeed
This is a book about life, dedicated to the joining of what s been separated the Jewish past and the American present, art and academia, fathers and sons which in these pages become as mutually reliant as lyrics and music. This, come to think of it, might be the secret form to which all of Justin s work aspires: that divine recombined form of story and memoir called song. Joshua Cohen, Jewish Currents
As a memoirist, Taylor is thoughtful, measured, and unflinching. Full Stop
One of the year s most impressive books. Largehearted Boy
Justin Taylor s relentless, peripatetic, and tender search for reconciliation with his late troubled father blooms into a full-throated song of joy about his own life lived through music, teaching, travel, and literature. Riding with the Ghost is gorgeously layered and deeply felt. Lauren Groff, author of Florida
An atmospheric, openhearted memoir of great range and ambition. Like his literary hero Denis Johnson, Taylor fearlessly swings from the gutter to the stars and back again in this precisely observed meditation on love and loss. Jenny Offill, author of Weather
In propulsive readable prose, Justin Taylor does something that most people would find impossible: He delves through grief and trauma to find the true story of his own troubled, brilliant father, and to trace the ways that his father s influence shaped and warped his life and his family. Without being at all polemical, Riding with the Ghost has much to teach us about masculinity, patriarchy, and family in America. Emily Gould, author of Perfect Tunes
From the East Coast to the West Coast to the Gulf Coast, Riding with the Ghost is a classic American road narrative, an intimate portrait of a father, the story of an artist s coming-of-age, a statement of faith, and a requiem for all those who have touched our lives yet left too soon. Justin Taylor is a master storyteller, and his voice resounds. Sarah Gerard, author of True Love
In this deeply reflective, sensitive narrative . . . there s plenty of additional insightful observations about the stories we tell ourselves and the differences between the way we shape a story and the way we live our lives. A greater literary achievement than Taylor s impressive fiction. Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
Justin Taylor is the author of the short-story collections Everything Here Is the Best Thing Ever and Flings, and the novel The Gospel of Anarchy. His fiction and nonfiction have appeared in The New Yorker, Harper s, The Sewanee Review, n+1, The New York Times Book Review, and Literary Hub. He lives in Portland, Oregon.