Four Novels from Unnamed Press reviewed by Johnny Payne

THE PAPER MAN
by Gallagher Lawson
Unnamed Press, 267 pages
REMEMBER THE SCORPION
by Isaac Goldemberg
translated from the Spanish by Jonathan Tittler
Unnamed Press, 133 pages
THE FINE ART OF FUCKING UP
by Cate Dicharry
Unnamed Press, 230 pages
ESCAPE FROM BAGHDAD
by Saad Z. Hossain
Unnamed Press, 304 pages
reviewed by Johnny Payne
The wryly-named Unnamed Press out of Los Angeles is living the self-appointed paradox of making a name for itself. Any independent press walks the line between sufficient eclecticism to draw in a swath of curious readers, and a strong enough identity to stand out from the pack. Unnamed Press has achieved this goal with a set of spanking new novel releases: Escape from Baghdad, Remember the Scorpion, The Paper Man, and The Fine Art of Fucking Up (possible best title of the year).
A decided taste rules the selections:
There is snappy dialogue. “He’s a sullen little shit, but his work’s pretty good;” “All of Lima smells like a woman in heat.” “I dream only in American.”
There is narrative pith. The first, brief paragraph of The Fine Art of Fucking Up reads:
I am sitting behind my desk watching the downpour when I catch the scent of bacon. Dunbar is in the building again, despite the restraining order.