“Astounding…cool as a cucumber and glittering with startling observations about love, technology, work, media and film. Plus: it’s funny.” — Molly Young
“Television is a rare thing: a work of formal ingenuity that dismantles the narrative constraints of celebrity, memory, and media. Even as its characters grapple with artifice—in love, in the performances of self—the novel is plangent. It is an actor’s monologue and a biographer’s aside, a love letter and a critique of attention. In other words, this is a novel as strange, seductive, and inescapable as film itself.” — Zain Khalid, author of Brother Alive
“Television is as stylish as it is substantial. A timely and timeless novel for readers of Joan Didion and Gary Indiana. An excellent first book.” — Stephanie Wambugu, author of Lonely Crowds
“Television sent me on paths I didn’t expect, turning timeless topics such as love, lust, and success into characters, at once elusive and incessant, as they are in life. With quick, surefooted language sometimes giving way to epiphanic fragments that nearly break the fourth wall, we're on high alert that nothing is so easily explained by some idea of reality, especially when actors are involved.” — Natasha Stagg, author of Grand Rapids