Tom Bradley (author)

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Tom Bradley, novelist, 2007
Tom Bradley, novelist, 2007

Tom Bradley is an American novelist, essayist and writer of short stories. He is the author of The Sam Edwine Pentateuch[1], a five-book series, various volumes of which have been nominated for the Editor's Book Award[2], the New York University Bobst Prize[3], and the AWP Award Series in the Novel[4]. His essays and short stories are anthologized extensively in America and in Europe.

Tom Bradley's nonfiction has appeared in such publications as Salon.com and McSweeney's, and is regularly featured by the 3.7 million-hit-per-month Arts & Letters Daily. Denis Dutton, editor of the site, "among the most influential media personalities in the world" [5], writes as follows:

Tom Bradley is one of the most exasperating, offensive, pleasurable, and brilliant writers I know. I recommend his work to anyone with spiritual fortitude and a taste for something so strange that it might well be genius. [6]

His sixth book, Fission Among the Fanatics, was named Non-Fiction Book of the Year 2007 by 3:AM Magazine, with the citation, a literary giant among pygmies. [7]

With the appearance of his prose in London's Ambit Magazine[8], Tom Bradley has become associated with British transgressive writers and artists such as J.G. Ballard and Ralph Steadman.

The publication of his seventh book, Lemur, by Raw Dog Screaming Press[9] staked him out a position in the new Bizarro fiction movement. According to The Advocate, Lemur "could do as much to raise the rainbow flag as two Stonewall Day parades." Furthermore, the novel has "introduced a type that seems new to the public eye, but has been there under our noses ever since alternative sexuality began."[10]

Tom Bradley has meanwhile contributed to the theoretical elucidation of the Bizarro aesthetic with his criticism [11] [12] and his interviews.[13] [14]

According to Identity Theory Magazine-- [15]

Tom Bradley's fiction features such gentry as a harelip with a six-figure book advance,[16] a Palestinian abortionist,[17] a seven-foot-tall banjoist losing his mind in the London tube,[18] a peyote-eating teen killer,[19] a rent a-Frankenstein on Purple Haze,[20] a Chinese compulsive masturbator,[21] cannibal orgiasts in the basement of the Mormon Tabernacle,[22] and Japanese schoolgirls conscripted to stir the vats in a poison gas factory.[23]

Regarding the vexed question[24] of the extent to which his fictional alter-ego, Sam Edwine, is autobiographical, Tom Bradley has written--[25]

Well, if you stood the pair of us side by side and told him to shut the fuck up, you couldn't tell us apart. His is the higher native intelligence, while I behave better. For example, I haven't sunk a shovel into the skull of a former Iran hostage in the basement of a Popish convent[26]; nor have I kidnapped the Crown Princess of Japan and allowed her to perform a strange kind of verbal fornication on me outside a bathroom[27]. I did, once, however, like Sam Edwine, pass around pirated mimeographs of the Anarchist's Cookbook to an excitable bunch of grad students in Red China, resulting in at least one of them being shot in the back of the head point-blank in a public execution[28]. But Sam cackled about it, and I feel like a horrible shit.

I never ate way too many psilocybin mushrooms in the Oaxacan jungle, stumbled on a man dying in the road, and failed to remember my Spanish grammar[29],because, unlike Sam Edwine, I never had any Spanish grammar in the first place. In fact, he speaks a lot more languages than I do. But I write better--otherwise he'd be answering this question about me instead of vice versa.

Tom Bradley attended kindergarten downwind of above-ground hydrogen bomb tests [30]. In later life he met Edward Teller, inventor of the latter device, and was told "We had arms limitation from the very beginning. It commenced already with the second detonation."[31]

An exile for most of his life, Tom Bradley lived in the People's Republic of China for many years and lost friends in the Tiananmen Square Massacre [32]. He was thrown out of China for political reasons [33].

As an "unsung nukee[34]," Tom Bradley gravitated to Hiroshima[35] and Nagasaki[36], "the most glamorous nuclear test sites of all[37]," where his books and articles continue to cause controversies of a political nature [38] [39]. In the opinion of Barry Katz, who writes for 3:AM Magazine in Paris, Tom Bradley deliberately courts controversy in the Extreme Orient, often to his own personal peril--

He does seem bent on leaving absolutely nobody unpissed-off. His venom’s no less ecumenical than gratuitous. He has braided a scourge of cords and is beleaguering folks in fanes of every denomination within reach. Take your pick: polygamist, popish or pagan...[40].

NPR commentator Andrei Codrescu's Exquisite Corpse Journal goes even further, referring to Tom Bradley's "megalomaniacal urge for public self-annihilation... [and] his unwholesome Christ complex."[41]

Tom Bradley claims paternal descent from a loose clan of Mormon handcart pioneers who were excommunicated almost immediately upon arriving in Deseret[42].

He is matrilaterally descended from an earlier Nagasaki expatriate, Thomas Glover, the "Scottish Samurai[43]." Known as the Founder of Modern Japan, Glover's heavy industrial pursuits eventually attracted America's second atom bomb[44]. It's been speculated that certain esoteric activities Tom Bradley has undertaken in Nagasaki are intended as atonement for this hereditary guilt[45].

Contents

[edit] External links

author Tom Bradley
author Tom Bradley

[edit] Selected Books

[edit] Spoken Word[46]

Four performances from The Sam Edwine Pentateuch [47]

(podcast by London's nthposition Magazine, archived at the British Library)

Two rants at the Electronic Literature Organization

[edit] Quotations

Tom Bradley exiled in Foo-Chow
Tom Bradley exiled in Foo-Chow

Sam Edwine came to me, fully fleshed, one night in high school, long ago...With that sun-in-a-magnifying-glass concentration that only a fourteen-year-old mind can conjure up, I found myself at Shrewsbury, on the plain between Hal's camp and the rebels', and this big, fat, hilarious, cowardly, self-indulgent sot was standing over a corpse, saying "...if thou embowel me to-day, I'll give you leave to powder me and eat me too tomorrow."

Having stabbed that already dispatched body...this entity billowed up before me and said, "...with a new wound in your thigh, come you along with me." And he took me up on his back, and away we went.[48]


Writing is the pole around which my external circumstances are knotted like snakes. I could never hold anything together without writing.[49]


To craft an object so seemingly blameless as a book, yet so packed with furtive abomination, to bring forth a small rectangular solid that is fuller of life than most big round gooshy people--what luck, what a privilege![50]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Exquisite Corpse - A Journal of Letters and Life
  2. ^ The Spirit of Writing, Tarcher Putnam (NYC), 2001 (ISBN 1-58542-127-8)
  3. ^ The Edgier Waters, Snow Books (London), 2006 (ISBN 1-905-0052-02)
  4. ^ Sudden Stories, Mammoth Books, 2003 (ISBN 0-9718059-5-4)
  5. ^ Time Magazine 14 June 2004, U.S. edition
  6. ^ back cover, Fission Among the Fanatics, Spuyten Duyvil Books (NYC), 2007 (ISBN 1933132337), (ISBN 978-1933132334)
  7. ^ 3:AM Magazine » 3:AM Awards 2007
  8. ^ AMBIT Magazine, Issue 189, Summer 2007 ISSN 0002-6972 (London)
  9. ^ Raw Dog Screaming Press
  10. ^ The Advocate, review of Tom Bradley's Lemur
  11. ^ The Nab Gets Posthumously Bizarroized
  12. ^ Dream People
  13. ^ Novelist Tom Bradley Interviewed at Unlikely Stories
  14. ^ Bizarro Central, Interview with Tom Bradley
  15. ^ identity theory | featured author - tom bradley
  16. ^ The Stylist/Fiction
  17. ^ Eyeshot.net: The Epoxy-Resin Mao by Tom Bradley
  18. ^ Killing Bryce, Infinity Press, 2001 (ISBN 0741400901, ISBN 978-0741400901)
  19. ^ Exquisite Corpse - A Journal of Letters and Life
  20. ^ Big Bridge #6
  21. ^ Riding the Horse | Fiction | Tom Bradley | Oyster Boy Review 16 | Winter 2002 | Fiction & Poetry
  22. ^ Word Riot
  23. ^ Kara-kun, Flip-kun, Infinity Press, 2000 (ISBN 0741400448, ISBN 978-0741400444)
  24. ^ Review of Acting Alone, Dr. Dalma Brunauer, Journal of Evolutionary Psychology, March 1995
  25. ^ "...are you Sam Edwine?" All Hands On, Elephant Rock Books (Chicago), 2004 (ISBN 0-9753746-05)
  26. ^ Acting Alone, Browntrout Books (San Francisco), 1995 (ISBN 1563137232), (ISBN 978-1563137235)
  27. ^ Exquisite Corpse - A Journal of Letters and Life
  28. ^ "Substitutes" by Tom Bradley
  29. ^ Electronic Literature Organization - Directory
  30. ^ Acting Alone, Browntrout Books (San Francisco), 1995 (ISBN 1563137232), (ISBN 978-1563137235)
  31. ^ nthposition online magazine: A sense of no place
  32. ^ Gadfly Online
  33. ^ Salon Books | Bathtub revolutionary
  34. ^ nthposition online magazine: My public ministry among the heathen
  35. ^ McSweeney's Internet Tendency: Holiday in Hiroshima
  36. ^ identity theory | alphabet zen - "the bloodsucker of nagasaki" by tom bradley
  37. ^ INJURING ETERNITY by Tom Bradley
  38. ^ Exquisite Corpse - A Journal of Letters and Life
  39. ^ Salon Books | Turning Japanese
  40. ^ King Kong Vs. Godzilla: Tom Bradley Happy-Fucks Osaka
  41. ^ Review of The Curved Jewels
  42. ^ Fission Among the Fanatics, Spuyten Duyvil Books (NYC), 2007 (ISBN 1933132337), (ISBN 978-1933132334)
  43. ^ identity theory | alphabet zen - "the bloodsucker of nagasaki" by tom bradley
  44. ^ The Scottish Samurai, Canongate Books Ltd,1997 (ISBN 0862417465 ISBN 978-0862417468)
  45. ^ Exquisite Corpse - A Journal of Letters and Life
  46. ^ "How to Give a Rousing Reading: Advice from an Amplified Author," The Practical Writer, Penguin Books (NYC), 2004 (ISBN 0142004006, ISBN 978-0142004005)
  47. ^ "...are you Sam Edwine?" All Hands On, Elephant Rock Books (Chicago), 2004 (ISBN 0-9753746-05)
  48. ^ ibid.
  49. ^ Raw Dog Screaming Press interview, February 2008
  50. ^ Interview at Unlikely Stories