Helen of Nowhere

Author:   Makenna Goodman
Publisher:   Fitzcarraldo Editions
ISBN:  

9781804272206


Pages:   168
Publication Date:   29 January 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Helen of Nowhere


Overview

In the middle of the countryside, a realtor is showing a disgraced professor around an idyllic house. She speaks not only about the home's many wonderful qualities but about its previous owner, the mystifying Helen, whose presence still seems to suffuse every fixture. Through hearing stories of Helen's chosen way of living, the man begins to see that his story is not actually over - rather, he is being offered a chance to buy his way into the simple life, close to the land, that's always been out of reach to him. But as evening fades into black, he will learn that the asking price may be much higher, and stranger, than anticipated. Philosophically and formally adventurous, at once intimate and cosmic in scope, Helen of Nowhere asks: What must we give up in exchange for true happiness?

Full Product Details

Author:   Makenna Goodman
Publisher:   Fitzcarraldo Editions
Imprint:   Fitzcarraldo Editions
ISBN:  

9781804272206


ISBN 10:   1804272205
Pages:   168
Publication Date:   29 January 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Reviews

‘Virtuosically written, with an insanity inside its sanity – or the other way around – that seems the proper use to make of reality in this moment.’ — Rachel Cusk, author of Parade ‘Helen of Nowhere is one of the most surprising novels I’ve ever read. Goodman has found a unique way of blending political urgency and psychological insight with an almost hallucinatory spiritual dimension that manages to strike the reader as perfectly justified, deeply funny and profoundly true.’ — Vincenzo Latronico, author of Perfection ‘Goodman has wrought an epic in miniature, somehow as appealingly vast as a Greek tragedy or a Platonic dialogue, equal parts philosophy and art that's also delightfully wicked, like something from a fairytale or a fever dream.’ — Sarah Manguso, author of Liars ‘This is a wild and brave book! Intrepid, reconfiguring, and full of the best hauntings. In Helen of Nowhere, Goodman has daringly crafted toothsome characters you will devour.’ — Samantha Hunt, author of The Unwritten Book ‘A furious energy runs through Helen of Nowhere, whose every sentence is a joy to read. This is a book about loneliness and bitterness written with a wicked humor, and its moments of grace are as striking as they are enigmatic. A unique and brilliant work.’ — Ayşegül Savaş, author of The Anthropologists ‘Blending biting wit and gorgeous, lyrical prose, Helen of Nowhere is at once a modern satire summoning Dickens in A Christmas Carol, an exploration of the failures of second wave feminism, and a sneaky ode to Woolf and Thoreau. It’s hard to pin down what this book is exactly, and whether or not Helen is Jesus, a furniture maker, god, the house, a wife, or time itself. Which is why you must restart it the moment you turn the last haunting page.’ — Alexandra Auder, author of Don't Call Me Home ‘Helen of Nowhere is an extraordinary book, gripping, daring and unusual. With a pacing that completely swept me along, Goodman explores the need to steady oneself by valuing that which is dear, by taking care of the love that needs to be nourished. The trajectory through anger into healing feels like a real journey in time – the dialogue flashing past, written with such speed and brilliance. I wolfed it down.’ — Celia Paul, author of Letters to Gwen John


‘Virtuosically written, with an insanity inside its sanity – or the other way around – that seems the proper use to make of reality in this moment.’ — Rachel Cusk, author of Parade ‘Helen of Nowhere is one of the most surprising novels I’ve ever read. Goodman has found a unique way of blending political urgency and psychological insight with an almost hallucinatory spiritual dimension that manages to strike the reader as perfectly justified, deeply funny and profoundly true.’ — Vincenzo Latronico, author of Perfection ‘Goodman has wrought an epic in miniature, somehow as appealingly vast as a Greek tragedy or a Platonic dialogue, equal parts philosophy and art that's also delightfully wicked, like something from a fairytale or a fever dream.’ — Sarah Manguso, author of Liars ‘This is a wild and brave book! Intrepid, reconfiguring, and full of the best hauntings. In Helen of Nowhere, Goodman has daringly crafted toothsome characters you will devour.’ — Samantha Hunt, author of The Unwritten Book ‘A furious energy runs through Helen of Nowhere, whose every sentence is a joy to read. This is a book about loneliness and bitterness written with a wicked humor, and its moments of grace are as striking as they are enigmatic. A unique and brilliant work.’ — Ayşegül Savaş, author of The Anthropologists ‘Never have I read a book before that seemed to me so much like a dream, both utterly strange and somehow my own. A jolt, a bracing gasp of air, this is a novel for anybody who has had the thought recently that all contemporary fiction is the same.’ — Polly Barton, author of Porn: An Oral History ‘Helen of Nowhere expands one's sense of how a novel can be written.’ — Sheila Heti, author of Alphabetical Diaries ‘Uncanny and brilliant in its voicing of power and control, excellent on what it means to come face to face with one's own hubris, be that literary, philosophical or embodied. An intimate and immersive tour de force by a writer with a fearless style.’ —Preti Taneja, author of Aftermath ‘Blending biting wit and gorgeous, lyrical prose, Helen of Nowhere is at once a modern satire summoning Dickens in A Christmas Carol, an exploration of the failures of second wave feminism, and a sneaky ode to Woolf and Thoreau. It’s hard to pin down what this book is exactly, and whether or not Helen is Jesus, a furniture maker, god, the house, a wife, or time itself. Which is why you must restart it the moment you turn the last haunting page.’ — Alexandra Auder, author of Don't Call Me Home ‘Helen of Nowhere is an extraordinary book, gripping, daring and unusual. With a pacing that completely swept me along, Goodman explores the need to steady oneself by valuing that which is dear, by taking care of the love that needs to be nourished. The trajectory through anger into healing feels like a real journey in time – the dialogue flashing past, written with such speed and brilliance. I wolfed it down.’ — Celia Paul, author of Letters to Gwen John


‘Virtuosically written, with an insanity inside its sanity – or the other way around – that seems the proper use to make of reality in this moment.’ — Rachel Cusk, author of Parade ‘Goodman has wrought an epic in miniature, somehow as appealingly vast as a Greek tragedy or a Platonic dialogue, equal parts philosophy and art that's also delightfully wicked, like something from a fairytale or a fever dream.’ — Sarah Manguso, author of Liars ‘This is a wild and brave book! Intrepid, reconfiguring, and full of the best hauntings. In Helen of Nowhere, Goodman has daringly crafted toothsome characters you will devour.’ — Samantha Hunt, author of The Unwritten Book ‘A furious energy runs through Helen of Nowhere, whose every sentence is a joy to read. This is a book about loneliness and bitterness written with a wicked humor, and its moments of grace are as striking as they are enigmatic. A unique and brilliant work.’ — Ayşegül Savaş, author of The Anthropologists ‘Blending biting wit and gorgeous, lyrical prose, Helen of Nowhere is at once a modern satire summoning Dickens in A Christmas Carol, an exploration of the failures of second wave feminism, and a sneaky ode to Woolf and Thoreau. It’s hard to pin down what this book is exactly, and whether or not Helen is Jesus, a furniture maker, god, the house, a wife, or time itself. Which is why you must restart it the moment you turn the last haunting page.’ — Alexandra Auder, author of Don't Call Me Home ‘Helen of Nowhere is an extraordinary book, gripping, daring and unusual. With a pacing that completely swept me along, Goodman explores the need to steady oneself by valuing that which is dear, by taking care of the love that needs to be nourished. The trajectory through anger into healing feels like a real journey in time – the dialogue flashing past, written with such speed and brilliance. I wolfed it down.’ — Celia Paul, author of Letters to Gwen John


‘Virtuosically written, with an insanity inside its sanity – or the other way around – that seems the proper use to make of reality in this moment.’ — Rachel Cusk, author of Parade ‘Helen of Nowhere is one of the most surprising novels I’ve ever read. Goodman has found a unique way of blending political urgency and psychological insight with an almost hallucinatory spiritual dimension that manages to strike the reader as perfectly justified, deeply funny and profoundly true.’ — Vincenzo Latronico, author of Perfection ‘Goodman has wrought an epic in miniature, somehow as appealingly vast as a Greek tragedy or a Platonic dialogue, equal parts philosophy and art that's also delightfully wicked, like something from a fairytale or a fever dream.’ — Sarah Manguso, author of Liars ‘This is a wild and brave book! Intrepid, reconfiguring, and full of the best hauntings. In Helen of Nowhere, Goodman has daringly crafted toothsome characters you will devour.’ — Samantha Hunt, author of The Unwritten Book ‘A furious energy runs through Helen of Nowhere, whose every sentence is a joy to read. This is a book about loneliness and bitterness written with a wicked humor, and its moments of grace are as striking as they are enigmatic. A unique and brilliant work.’ — Ayşegül Savaş, author of The Anthropologists ‘Never have I read a book before that seemed to me so much like a dream, both utterly strange and somehow my own. A jolt, a bracing gasp of air, this is a novel for anybody who has had the thought recently that all contemporary fiction is the same.’ — Polly Barton, author of Porn: An Oral History ‘Uncanny and brilliant in its voicing of power and control, excellent on what it means to come face to face with one's own hubris, be that literary, philosophical or embodied. An intimate and immersive tour de force by a writer with a fearless style.’ —Preti Taneja, author of Aftermath ‘Blending biting wit and gorgeous, lyrical prose, Helen of Nowhere is at once a modern satire summoning Dickens in A Christmas Carol, an exploration of the failures of second wave feminism, and a sneaky ode to Woolf and Thoreau. It’s hard to pin down what this book is exactly, and whether or not Helen is Jesus, a furniture maker, god, the house, a wife, or time itself. Which is why you must restart it the moment you turn the last haunting page.’ — Alexandra Auder, author of Don't Call Me Home ‘Helen of Nowhere is an extraordinary book, gripping, daring and unusual. With a pacing that completely swept me along, Goodman explores the need to steady oneself by valuing that which is dear, by taking care of the love that needs to be nourished. The trajectory through anger into healing feels like a real journey in time – the dialogue flashing past, written with such speed and brilliance. I wolfed it down.’ — Celia Paul, author of Letters to Gwen John


Author Information

Makenna Goodman is the author of two novels, Helen of Nowhere and The Shame, and has written for international publications including the New York Review of Books, the Los Angeles Review of Books, Harvard Review, The White Review, BOMB, The Common, ASTRA Magazine and Mousse Magazine. Also an editor, she is based in Vermont.

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