A major accomplishment by a major writer … .

John Madera, Big Other

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“This stunning collection revels in wordplay and inventiveness, and is one of the finest short fiction collections I have read all year.”

Largehearted Boy

[This book] is a cat’s cradle of people and places and a mad scientist’s bubbling test tubes and levers, woven together and delivered by a writer possessed of an intense intellectual curiosity and playfulness.

Amber Sparks, Big Other

“Philosophical, sometimes whimsical, darkly funny, thought provoking, intense, evocative.”

Bookconscious

“The writing is in turns vibrant and imaginative, eloquent and thoughtful, and lush and whimsical.”

Books Speak Volumes

This is transformative prose at its best.

HTML Giant

The buzz [this book] gives off is the combined buzz of countless pockets, all charged with a life and surprise of their own.

The Collagist

“There is so much to appreciate in these intelligent and eloquently written, yet deceivingly understated stories, you may wish to read some of them more than once.”

Books, Personally

There’s plenty of imagination present here, yes — but it’s rooted in recognizable and occasionally irrational emotions, a human quality that’s makes these stories endure.

Vol. 1 Brooklyn

“Taken as a complete work, Understories is a remarkable collection, with pitch-perfect leaps of imagination side-by-side with characters struggling in wholly recognizable ways.”

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune

Horvath’s stories simultaneously stimulate the intellect while being fantastically imaginative.

Stacie M. Williams, Boswell Book Company (Milwaukee, WI)


Understories

What if there were a city that consisted only of restaurants? What if Paul Gauguin had gone to Greenland instead of Tahiti? What if there were a field called Umbrology, the study of shadows, where physicists and shadow puppeteers worked side by side? Full of speculative daring though firmly anchored in the tradition of realism, Tim Horvath’s stories explore all of this and more— blending the everyday and wondrous to contend with age-old themes of loss, identity, imagination, and the search for human connection. Whether making offhand references to Mystery Science Theater, providing a new perspective on Heidegger’s philosophy and forays into Nazism, or following the imaginary travels of a library book, Horvath’s writing is as entertaining as it is thought provoking.



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