Vox (Nicholson Baker novel)


Vox is a 1992 novel by Nicholson Baker. Unusually, for a literary novel, Vox enjoyed several weeks on the New York Times best-seller list.

Reception

On release

On the release of Vox in 1994, Publishers Weekly declared it was "unaccountably self-indulgent" and that "Baker's inestimable gift, evinced in the other books, for describing the indescribable with absolutely spot-on flourishes are nowhere to be found in Vox." For The Village Voice it "simply ushers us into the back pages of a glossy magazine" whereas The New York Times Book Review found it "a compelling and irresistible take, a tour-de-force illustration of the fantasy inherent in eroticism." For James Kaplan, writing in Vanity Fair, "the book achieves between its two geographically distanced protagonists the kind of intimacy that all of us, from Bible-thumpers to leather fanciers yearn for. Vox is that rarest of rarities: a warm turn on".

Later

Writing in the New York Times in 2011, Charles McGrath declared Vox to be a "phone-sex novel so steamy that Monica Lewinsky gave it as a gift to Bill Clinton." Baker's editor in the 1990s, David Rosenthal commented that "when Vox came in, I thought it was both hilarious and horny I kept thinking, 'Where on earth did this come from?'"