
Amazon Prime Free Trial
FREE Delivery is available to Prime members. To join, select "Try Amazon Prime and start saving today with FREE Delivery" below the Add to Cart button and confirm your Prime free trial.
Amazon Prime members enjoy:- Cardmembers earn 5% Back at Amazon.com with a Prime Credit Card.
- Unlimited FREE Prime delivery
- Streaming of thousands of movies and TV shows with limited ads on Prime Video.
- A Kindle book to borrow for free each month - with no due dates
- Listen to over 2 million songs and hundreds of playlists
Important: Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, your membership will automatically upgrade to a monthly membership.
Buy new:
-20% $22.27$22.27
Ships from: Amazon.com Sold by: Amazon.com
Save with Used - Very Good
$17.17$17.17
$3.99 delivery May 2 - 8
Ships from: HPB Inc. Sold by: HPB Inc.

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Follow the author
OK
Rejection: Fiction Hardcover – September 17, 2024
Purchase options and add-ons
LONGLISTED FOR THE 2024 NATIONAL BOOK AWARD IN FICTION • A NEW YORK TIMES BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR
"A master comedian with a virtuoso prose style has produced an audacious, original and highly disturbing book . . . an incandescent satire." —Giles Harvey, The New York Times Magazine
From the Whiting and O. Henry–winning author of Private Citizens (“the first great millennial novel,” New York Magazine), an electrifying novel-in-stories that follows a cast of intricately linked characters as rejection throws their lives and relationships into chaos.
Sharply observant and outrageously funny, Rejection is a provocative plunge into the touchiest problems of modern life. The seven connected stories seamlessly transition between the personal crises of a complex ensemble and the comic tragedies of sex, relationships, identity, and the internet.
In “The Feminist,” a young man’s passionate allyship turns to furious nihilism as he realizes, over thirty lonely years, that it isn’t getting him laid. A young woman’s unrequited crush in “Pics” spirals into borderline obsession and the systematic destruction of her sense of self. And in “Ahegao; or, The Ballad of Sexual Repression,” a shy late bloomer’s flailing efforts at a first relationship leads to a life-upending mistake. As the characters pop up in each other’s dating apps and social media feeds, or meet in dimly lit bars and bedrooms, they reveal the ways our delusions can warp our desire for connection.
These brilliant satires explore the underrated sorrows of rejection with the authority of a modern classic and the manic intensity of a manifesto. Audacious and unforgettable, Rejection is a stunning mosaic that redefines what it means to be rejected by lovers, friends, society, and oneself.
"Rejection is unrelentingly brutal and gut-bustingly funny and spares no one—not you, not me. Tulathimutte is a pervert and a madman and a stone-cold genius." —Carmen Maria Machado, author of Her Body and Other Parties
“One of the foremost fiction writers exploring the subject of his own generation.” —Jia Tolentino, The New Yorker
- Print length272 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherWilliam Morrow
- Publication dateSeptember 17, 2024
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.86 x 8.25 inches
- ISBN-100063337878
- ISBN-13978-0063337879
The chilling story of the abduction of two teenagers, their escape, and the dark secrets that, years later, bring them back to the scene of the crime. | Learn more
Frequently bought together

Customers who viewed this item also viewed
- Love is not an accomplishment, yet to lack it still somehow feels like failure.Highlighted by 682 Kindle readers
- But discourse is loneliness disguised as war. What people there really want is to be perceived on their own terms, which is so, so funny. Because if the grand promise of the internet was to be whoever you want, in reality it will make of you whatever it wants, and beneath every mask is another mask mistaken for a face.Highlighted by 423 Kindle readers
- Her anger cremates away all her affection for him, but not the obsession, leaving her a scorched skeleton of wrath.Highlighted by 332 Kindle readers
- “It’s easy to feel sorry for yourself when you keep redefining rejection. You refuse pity but crave it so much that you won’t admit how strongly you invite it.”Highlighted by 321 Kindle readers
From the Publisher


Editorial Reviews
Review
"Tulathimutte is such an acutely observant writer that I was entranced by his book despite its narrowness and emotional barbarity. One of Tulathimutte’s primal topics is online culture and its diseased repercussions, and he writes about these things in the way Anthony Bourdain wrote about restaurants, Hunter S. Thompson wrote about motorcycle gangs and Molly Ivins wrote about water-headed Texas politicians. He’s alert, in other words; he’s tanked up, bleakly funny and always stropping his knife. . . . Tulathimutte is a big talent and he is clearly just getting started.” — Dwight Garner, The New York Times Book Review
“Not until I picked up Tony Tulathimutte’s Rejection did I realize how fun it could be to read a book about a bunch of huge fucking losers. . . . it’s a thrill for the sickos among us, the king being Tulathimutte, who gives loserdom its own rancid carnival. Tulathimutte understands the project—both his own and that of his characters—with diagnostic, comprehensive hyper-precision; as you behold his parade of marketplace failure and personal pathology, he’s ten steps ahead of any reaction you could muster. . . . one of the foremost fiction writers exploring the subject of his own generation.” — Jia Tolentino, The New Yorker
"A master comedian with a virtuoso prose style has produced an audacious, original and highly disturbing book . . . an incandescent satire." — Giles Harvey, The New York Times Magazine
“Maybe ‘love’ is too soft-focus of a word for the mix of awe, exhilaration and, occasionally, nausea I felt while reading about the book’s unlucky protagonists. . . Tulathimutte writes with virtuosic brio about loneliness and humiliation. I found myself perversely heartened by his depraved genius. His book is what I needed to read this year: bleak, funny and utterly ruthless.” — Jennifer Szalai, The New York Times Book Review
“The closest thing to reading David Foster Wallace I’ve encountered since we lost him. It’s upsetting and hilarious and impressively deranged.” — Chris Hayes
"The funniest book I've ever read." — Bowen Yang
“A blistering collection of interconnecting short stories, Rejection takes a magnifying glass to the mind in the internet age.” — Vogue, “Best Books of the Year”
“Startlingly good. . . There’s a volatile thrill to the writing that owes to the electricity of the language but also to the collision of extreme registers. The psychic torment of these characters can be as disturbing as graphic horror stories; it can also be snortingly funny.” — Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal
“Flayed open by the author’s scrutiny, these characters blister off the page, all of them electric in their rage, their alienation, their tragicomic grossness. Paired with a deft metafictional coda, their voices coalesce into a unified theory of rejection. Perverse, profane, and profound, Rejection will make your skin crawl.” — Esquire, Best Books of the Year
“Gutting. . . Cleverly satirizes a heartless world while nailing what stings so much about rejection.” — TIME, “100 Must-Read Books of the Year”
“One of the funniest books I’ve read in years and a smart take on how the internet breaks our brains.” — NPR, “Books We Love”
“Satire is alive and well, as evidenced by Tulathimutte’s flamboyant collection. One protagonist takes to an incel message board after failing to convince women he’s a feminist. Another sabotages his first potentially serious relationship with a man out of fear he’ll be rejected for his kink. A throbbing heart beats at the center of the hilarity and ribaldry, making this irresistible.” — Publishers Weekly, Best Books of the Year
“Rejection could be the year's feel-bad book, but Tulathimutte's inventiveness, his intellect, his sense of humor, and his precise style make his characters' mortifications a pleasure to read. . . Like [Philip] Roth, Tulathimutte knows desire can be as ludicrous as it is urgent; like Roth, he likes a good dirty joke. . . . [Rejection] deserves many and enthusiastic readers.” — Matthew Keeley, The Boston Globe
“It’s the funniest, darkest thing—it’s like Dostoevsky’s Notes from Underground meets Instagram.” — St Vincent
“Obsessively readable, acerbic, Foster Wallace–inflected.” — Vanity Fair
“Tulathimutte’s unnerving depiction of angry losers in these interconnected stories is hard to look away from.” — Vulture, “Books We Can’t Wait to Read this Fall”
“A suite of linked stories about raging losers in the Internet era, with the prose-dial turned up to gasp-inducing Nabokov and Amis levels. . . one of the boldest works in recent memory.” — Karan Mahajan, Granta
“If our chronic online existence is like shouting into the void, then Rejection is the void shouting back.” — Luke Gair, The Sewanee Review (Staff Pick)
“I’m not sure I’ve ever read a more gleefully merciless book than Tony Tulathimutte’s brilliant novel in stories. . . . Tulathimutte is a connoisseur of the humiliating desires that lurk within all of us. Luckily, he’s also outrageously funny, which makes it impossible to put the book down, even when the cringe threatens to annihilate you.” — Jessie Gaynor, Literary Hub
“A hilarious, disgusting work of genius.” — Leah Abrams, Interview magazine
"Blazingly perceptive." — Cat Zhang, The Cut
“Scathing, satirical. . . a feast of schadenfreude for the hardy reader, and rest assured that the author isn't about to let himself off the hook. Absolutely merciless.” — Chicago Public Library, “Best Books of the Year”
“Brain-twisting, incisive, and laugh-out-loud funny.” — Angela Hui, Electric Literature
“Tulathimutte is unafraid to write the most disturbing, disgusting, and delightfully deranged things. Each time you think the characters have hit rock bottom, they pull out a shovel and start digging more. . . . An inventive and shameless story collection for the chronically online.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“The prose is consistently sharp and funny as Tulathimutte cuts to the truth of his characters’ dilemmas. It’s a first-rate exploration of yearning and solitude.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Phenomenal. . . few writers dramatize the effects of being perennially online as astutely and engagingly as Tulathimutte does here. Rejection is thoughtfully and artfully constructed and outrageously entertaining.” — Booklist (starred review)
“Tulathimutte has written one of the most brilliantly funny works of fiction since Paul Beatty's The Sellout. Reject it at one's peril.” — Shelf Awareness (starred review)
"Sounds unbearable, a human centipede of misery crossed with a brain worm becoming an Ouroboros. And yet it works. And it’s funny . . . This frantic anticipation of critique would be so annoying if it wasn’t also so smart." — Madeline Leung Coleman, Vulture
“Predictable scripts are suddenly made uncanny again in this collection. . . Each narrative accelerates and accelerates before spectacularly crashing, as if self-annihilation is the only way out for characters who feel so entrapped by circumstance and category that they have nothing left to lose.” — Jane Hu, The Washington Post
“I can’t stop thinking about [Rejection]. It’s a glimpse into these dark areas of the internet that are very scary but also really funny and strange and kind of sad.” — Randall Park, in The New York Times
“Tulathimutte’s linked story collection plunges into the touchy topics of sex, relationships, identity, and the internet.” — The Millions, “Most Anticipated Books of Summer”
“Tulathimutte is incredibly attuned to the awkwardness of modern life, and can spin the most cringy, painful moments into brilliant satire. Rejection is a collection of very smart stories for the very online; in exploring “rejection,” Tulathimutte digs into the most basic of modern fears.” — Literary Hub, “Most Anticipated Books of the Year”
"Tulathimutte is utterly inimitable. Rejection is fast and funny, a delirious convergence of the haptic and uncanny." — Raven Leilani, New York Times bestselling author of Luster
"Rejection is unrelentingly brutal and gut-bustingly funny and spares no one—not you, not me. Tulathimutte is a pervert and a madman and a stone-cold genius." — Carmen Maria Machado, author of Her Body and Other Parties
“Tony Tulathimutte’s supercharged prose and profound existential comedy reveal something true at the heart of our desperate human condition. Rejection is a book of mad, madcap genius.” — Garth Greenwell, author of Cleanness
"I could compare Rejection to the work of Nabokov, in its stylish and blazingly original skewering of convention; or to that of Roth, in the daring with which it plumbs the darkest depths of the human psyche to excavate what is most vulnerable about us; or to the worst (by which I mean best) Am I the Asshole post you’ve ever read on Reddit, in its commitment to embodying its characters at their neediest and most candid and therefore most delectable. But to do so would be to sell it short. I finished Rejection breathless with admiration. It is — Tulathimutte is — that rare thing in American literature: truly original." — Vauhini Vara, Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of The Immortal King Rao
“The stories in Rejection ring with audacity like a siren. The characters within are deliriously shocking, toxic, transgressive, but due to Tulathimutte’s extraordinary talents, the most frightening moments in the collection—those which make this book feel truly dangerous—are those of empathy. It’s this vertiginous event, feeling like I’m leering on from behind the safety of a glass wall, savoring the thrill of moving in for a far closer peek than I’d ever dare in the wild, then suddenly realizing I’m the one behind the glass, a complicit specimen who’s just been collected via the author’s mastery that will have me reading and rereading this book until I die or can no longer stand it. Tulathimutte is peerless.”
— Alissa Nutting, author of Made for Love and Tampa
“From the opening sentence of Rejection, I was cannonballed into the twisted, obscene, pleasurable world of pure genius. It’s actually sick how Tony Tulathimutte has managed to make his prodigious, byzantine mind so compulsively readable and immaculately accessible, not to mention how, again and again, his deranged humor crosses over the threshold of the ordinary and into the astral realm. Read this book and you too will develop a fetish and taste for Tulathimutte’s gift for satire and insight into the human condition. You’ll never read a book like this again.” — Jenny Zhang, author of Sour Heart
“Uproariously funny and overflowing with decidedly feel-bad vibes, this novel-in-stories skewers modern vices ranging from group texts to dating apps with precision.” — San Francisco Chronicle
“Profane and profanely hysterical. . . . [Rejection] is so exactingly acidic, so entertaining in its pathos and humor, you’ll wonder how someone can so immaculately peer into the soul of millennial disorder in the way that he does. . . . I have never laughed as hard reading a work of fiction, maybe ever, while also being challenged by the clarity of its tragic dream. Under the microscope, Tulathimutte observes and scrutinizes the anatomy of our delusions, supercharged as they are by the internet. . . . Rejection is brain-meltingly good.” — Wired
"Don’t let the profanity of Rejection fool you—this is serious fiction. . . [Tulathimutte’s] fancy prose style reminded me of Nabokov if Nabokov had been born late enough to become obsessed with porn instead of butterflies." — Mike Jeffrey, The Los Angeles Review of Books
“Tulathimutte’s deft approach to writing these interconnected narratives is nothing short of brilliant.” — James Yu, The Brooklyn Rail
"One of the really phenomenal novels I've read in the last decade." — Jonathan Franzen on Private Citizens
“Scathing, upsetting and generous all at once, this novel, about millennial friends in pre-2008-crash San Francisco, thrums with Tulathimutte’s sly intelligence and unerring comic timing. . . . The warm flashes make the satire cut deeper: Tulathimutte loves these imperfect young humans while seeing them for who they are.” — The New York Times, “The Funniest Novels Since Catch-22," on Private Citizens
“Private Citizens is a brilliant novel—whip-smart, hilarious, and entirely engrossing.” — Emma Cline, New York Times bestselling author of The Girls and The Guest
"The first great millennial novel." — New York magazine on Private Citizens
“It may well be time that we start asking whose writing will populate the ‘millennial canon.’ Tony Tulathimutte’s debut novel, Private Citizens, is the answer to that question.” — Village Voice
“[A] hilarious portrait of youthful self-centeredness.” — The Paris Review on Private Citizens
“This season, my literary accessory choice is Tony Tulathimutte’s Private Citizens.” — Vogue
“Private Citizens is a combustible combination of acrobatic language, dead-on observations and hilarious, heartbreaking storytelling. Tulathimutte has created characters that are hard to forget—first they’ll make you want to strangle them, then you’ll end up falling in love with them.” — Angela Flournoy, National Book Award finalist and author of The Turner House
About the Author
Tony Tulathimutte is the author of Private Citizens and Rejection. His work has appeared in The Paris Review, n +1, The Nation, The New Republic, and The New York Times. The recipient of an O. Henry Award and a Whiting Award, he runs the writing class CRIT in Brooklyn.
Product details
- Publisher : William Morrow; First Edition (September 17, 2024)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0063337878
- ISBN-13 : 978-0063337879
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.86 x 8.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #15,418 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #198 in Fiction Satire
- #438 in Coming of Age Fiction (Books)
- #1,716 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Tony Tulathimutte’s novel Private Citizens was called “the first great millennial novel” by New York Magazine. A graduate of Stanford University and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, he has written for The New York Times, VICE, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, N+1, The New Republic, The Believer, Playboy, The Paris Review, and others. He has received a 2017 Whiting Award and an O. Henry Award, and appeared as a guest on Late Night with Seth Meyers.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book amazing and enjoy its writing, with one describing it as a genius flamethrowing creative work. Moreover, they appreciate the story quality, with one noting how the interwoven narratives stick with readers. However, the humor receives mixed reactions, with some finding it hilarious while others disagree.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Select to learn more
Customers find the book to be an amazing read.
"...It is worth the read, even if you aren’t as well versed in the internets as many of these stories revolved around." Read more
"Yes, very creative and original and very of the moment. Masterful and indulgent...." Read more
"...Pretty sure that’s on purpose. Interesting read, and the stories stick with you. The writing is very modern and fits the times we’re living in." Read more
"Great book, but Amazon made me edit my review and deleted what I’d written, so I’m just going to leave it at that." Read more
Customers enjoy the stories in this book, finding them thought-provoking and very of the moment, with one customer noting how the interwoven narratives are funny.
"Yes, very creative and original and very of the moment. Masterful and indulgent...." Read more
"...and realistic portrayal of their madness, and its representation of contemporary society, But it’s challenging to find it humorous and entertaining..." Read more
"...Pretty sure that’s on purpose. Interesting read, and the stories stick with you. The writing is very modern and fits the times we’re living in." Read more
"Rejection definitely being the theme, these interwoven stories are funny, thought provoking, disturbing, and most of all, annoying...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing quality of the book, with one noting its superior command of words and another describing it as the best novel they've read.
"Yes, very creative and original and very of the moment. Masterful and indulgent...." Read more
"Beautiful writing, I couldn’t stop reading it...." Read more
"...Interesting read, and the stories stick with you. The writing is very modern and fits the times we’re living in." Read more
"...but mostly bad. it made me feel bad. that’s the thing about good writing. it makes you feel something." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the humor in the book, with some finding it hilarious while others describe it as not funny.
"...Moments so shocking I'm left breathless and so raunchy I feel like I should go take a shower. And then moments when, yeah, man, I wish that was me!" Read more
"...REJECTION, a novel loosely woven of interrelated short stories, is a scathingly, howlingly funny take on the painful and cringe-inducing and often..." Read more
"...representation of contemporary society, But it’s challenging to find it humorous and entertaining, which I believe it is intended to be...." Read more
"...It's also hilarious at times. I give Rejection my highest recommendation." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews. Please reload the page.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2025This bit down hard on me, and I ate it voraciously in response. It is worth the read, even if you aren’t as well versed in the internets as many of these stories revolved around.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 22, 2024Yes, very creative and original and very of the moment. Masterful and indulgent. Moments so shocking I'm left breathless and so raunchy I feel like I should go take a shower. And then moments when, yeah, man, I wish that was me!
- Reviewed in the United States on November 4, 2024It is said that we all have an inner voice, often self-critical but also one that whispers to us about doubts and desires from the recesses of our consciousness. Often we are able to distinguish between these obsessive feelings and impulses and the real world, enabling us to maintain relationships and jobs and some semblance of balance. The characters here (and I’m about halfway through) are runaway trains of their fevered, delusional and self-destructive imaginations. It’s impossible not to admire the author’s highly detailed and realistic portrayal of their madness, and its representation of contemporary society, But it’s challenging to find it humorous and entertaining, which I believe it is intended to be. I often like dark portrayals of the human condition, but this is too sadistic for me.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2025Beautiful writing, I couldn’t stop reading it. Sometimes I could feel my spine retracting from the sheer vulnerability of these stories and how satisfied I felt as each story came to their end. Wish every book gave me this much of a thrill when reading, I’d do it everyday if that were the case
- Reviewed in the United States on February 14, 2025This book feels pretty manic honestly. Pretty sure that’s on purpose. Interesting read, and the stories stick with you. The writing is very modern and fits the times we’re living in.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2024Just under the wire I chose my favorite, my champion of novels, in 2024. It was a good year for them too! But Tulathimutte’s REJECTION, a novel loosely woven of interrelated short stories, is a scathingly, howlingly funny take on the painful and cringe-inducing and often just plain lonely experience of contemporary culture, notably as lived vicariously through social media apps alongside the frequently alienating discourses of the college theory classroom and its fixation on identity politics. Just a pure delight.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 3, 2024Painful to read and not always in an interesting way. Ends with what is basically a better "psycolonials". Absolutely bizarre to see fiction like this in the mainstream. What does "normie" even mean anymore when stuff like this is in n+1.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2025Rejection definitely being the theme, these interwoven stories are funny, thought provoking, disturbing, and most of all, annoying. He addresses this in the last chapter, a fake rejection letter of the book. It’s very meta.
Top reviews from other countries
- RobReviewed in Italy on January 13, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Sharp wit and scathing indictments
I loved the mix of narrators and their singular way of viewing themselves and the others. Tulathimutte has a way with words and turns of phrase that has left me wanting more.
- nicReviewed in Australia on February 23, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars A work of immaginative genius
It is bleak. It is hilarious. It is obscene. It is, undeniably, a work of genius.
TT's narratives amount to a blistering commentary on our culture & society - the grind, the commoditisation, the malaise, the ennui, the nihilism. A gut-punch I feel grateful for.
It's so contemporary that I had to read it with urban dictionary open next to me. TT is young; that's his fault.
His writing is so imaginative, so sharp. Incandescent turns of phrase and the ability to see and describe the world (including the hidden world of the psyche) clearly make every page pure pleasure. I found myself deliberately slowing down or going back to parts just to draw out the experience - like tantric reading.
Do yourself a favour.
- KennedyReviewed in Germany on October 28, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Brutal and so funny
If Sally Rooney writes stories where the characters’ pain is like a knot that she unties for you smoothly inside an education plot, then Tony T’s stories are like jagged knives thrust into your throat while the characters are drowning: the pain is explicit and overwhelming. It’s also demonically funny.
These are stories about people at their extremes. Some of it reads almost as satire, but it is too close to the bone to be taken as such. The people in his stories are degraded, needy, wounded and pathetic. They are the worst of ourselves - people you do not want to be. But the agony in reading about them is that they are recognizable and real.
He won’t win any prizes for making you feel terrible; but it’s brilliant nonetheless.
- gcfureyReviewed in Canada on December 11, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Good read
Well written