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With Waiting for Sophia at Shutters on the Beach, Aris Janigian dives headlong into one of the most impassioned issues of our era, sexual harassment and the #metoo movement. In what might very well be the first literary novel of its kind, the story is told from the perspective of a college professor accused of unwanted sexual contact, who, ironically, also sits on a committee asked to adjudicate a case of campus rape. The novel begins with this unnamed professor waiting in The Living Room of the posh Santa Monica hotel Shutters at the Beach for a doctoral student of his, Sophia, whom he hopes…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
With Waiting for Sophia at Shutters on the Beach, Aris Janigian dives headlong into one of the most impassioned issues of our era, sexual harassment and the #metoo movement. In what might very well be the first literary novel of its kind, the story is told from the perspective of a college professor accused of unwanted sexual contact, who, ironically, also sits on a committee asked to adjudicate a case of campus rape. The novel begins with this unnamed professor waiting in The Living Room of the posh Santa Monica hotel Shutters at the Beach for a doctoral student of his, Sophia, whom he hopes to seduce. While enjoying martinis, he recalls the unpredictable way his friendship with her unfolded; he rants against the hypocrisy and decadence of Los Angeles, laments the censoriousness and self-pitying of academia, and deliberates about his future as a professor, whether to stand firm in his principles, or flee. "How did woe is me," he asks of academia, "take the place of the truth will set you free?" Sophia, both brilliant and beautiful, leaves her home country, Poland, for America, when she is just eighteen. She hopes to escape a sexual scandal of her own making, threatening her reputation and the career of her father, a Polish diplomat. Starting life anew as an American college student, she soon learns that her roommate is living a shadow life as a sexual escort. Sophia follows suit, at first, to earn money, but as she hones her skills, she discovers that escorting has become, for her, akin to a religious calling. The first book of Janigian projected Waiting for… trilogy, Waiting for Lipchitz at Chateau Marmont, spent 18 weeks on the Los Angeles Times Bestseller list. Now, with Waiting for Sophia, a satirical mashup of Nabakov's Lolita and Dostoyevsky's Notes from the Underground, Janigian gives an unflinching, deadly serious, and yet tragic-comic view onto male sexuality in the era of #metoo. Waiting for Sophia is a novel of, and for, our time. With its scintillating denouement-set in a luxury hotel room in Santa Barbara-this novel will prove to be one of the most controversial and provocative in recent memory. from Waiting for Sophia: "Ah, you could still rely on a martini, its lovely cold crispness, the small green olive and its small swirling juices-how many just such martinis had provided a lubricant for any number of seductions. Odds were Sophia would know perfectly well that I had reserved this table at this beautiful bar overlooking one of our most beautiful beaches with the intent to proposition her, after, naturally, offering earnest guidance regarding the course her future should take."
Autorenporträt
For his first novel, Bloodvine, Aris Janigian was hailed by the Los Angeles Times as a "strong and welcome new voice," and in subsequent novels he has plumbed the American experience, from the struggle of 1920s immigrants to the fields of California to the neuroses and decadence of contemporary culture. His 2012 novel This Angelic Land, set during the 1992 Los Angeles Riots, was called "today's necessary book" by critic D. J. Waldie, and Janigian's Waiting for Lipchitz at Chateau Marmont, about a screenwriter who goes from riches to rags, spent seventeen weeks on the Los Angeles Times bestseller list. Janigian holds a PhD in psychology from the Claremont Graduate School and was formerly Senior Professor of Humanities at the Southern California Institute of Architecture and a contributing writer to West, the Los Angeles Times Sunday magazine. He was a finalist for Stanford University's William Saroyan Fiction Prize and the recipient of the Anahid Literary Award from Columbia University. In addition to his five novels, Janigian is co-author, with April Greiman, of Something from Nothing. He lives in Fresno, California, the city of his birth.