Joey Goebel
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Joey Goebel | |
Joey Goebel, Paragraph City |
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Born: | 1980 Henderson, Kentucky |
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Occupation: | novelist |
Genres: | Fiction |
Website: | joeygoebel.com |
Joey Goebel (born Adam Joseph Goebel III, in 1980) is an American author whose work centers around the peculiarities of culture in the midwestern United States. He was raised in Henderson, Kentucky, a small town on the Ohio River across from Evansville, Indiana. His parents, the late Adam Goebel of Louisville, and Nancy Bingemer of Henderson, were both social workers and met in Frankfort, Kentucky. His older sister CeCe is also a social worker.
Goebel currently lives in Kentucky, where he is engaged to be married in November, writing a third novel, and a candidate for a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from Spalding College.[1]
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[edit] Education and Careers
Goebel attended Brescia University in Owensboro, Kentucky, where he received an English degree with an emphasis in professional writing. While there he wrote a short story called, "Surrealist Party." Before becoming a published author, he was a musician, a screenwriter, a horse racetrack employee, and a record reviewer.
Goebel's protagonists are intelligent rebels, sensible madmen, and rejected dreamers disgusted by a society that embraces boy band media and girl glam. His prose laments the absence of originality and morality in contemporary culture.
[edit] Novels and Nominations
MacAdam/Cage Publishing of San Francisco published Goebel's first book The Anomalies in April of 2003. The Anomalies was a Book Sense 76 title selected by the nation's independent booksellers and was nominated for the Kentucky Literary Award. Goebel's second novel, Torture the Artist, was released in October of 2004, also by MacAdam/Cage. Torture the Artist was the finalist for the 2004 Kentucky Literary Award and made the long list for the Dylan Thomas Prize for 2006.[2]
In fall of 2005, Torture the Artist was published in German under the title Vincent by Diogenes Verlag, a Swiss literary publisher. Goebel attended the Frankfurt Book Fair, and he and Vincent were featured in Der Spiegel.
[edit] Music Career
[edit] The Mullets
From 1996-2001; prior to becoming a novelist, Goebel sang and played guitar for a punk band called The Mullets with band members Jason Sheeley and Justin Hope. The band played about one hundred shows throughout the Midwest (many in Evansville, Indiana) and released two cassette tapes, a seven inch EP record, and three Compact Discs.
The band had a rabid following in the Tri-state area of Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois. Goebel wrote over one hundred songs for the Mullets, some of them bitter love songs (“Swimmin’ Alone with the Turkeys”), some scoffing at his surroundings — particularly high school (“At the Pep Rally”), some making fun of popular culture (“Intrusive T.V. Neighbors”), and some purely comedic (“At a Flea Market”).
[edit] Novembrists
Goebel sang and played guitar for Novembrists, with bandmates Jr. Bailey and Luke Bickers. The band stayed together for about a year, long enough to record and release a CD. They played one farewell show.[3] Novembrists songs were a bit darker and had a few more literary allusions, such as Vladimir Nabokov ("My Sweet Lolita") and F. Scott Fitzgerald ("All the Sad Young Men").
[edit] Bibliography
[edit] The Anomalies (aka Freaks, German title) (2003)
[edit] Torture the Artist (aka Vincent, German title) (2004)
[edit] Other Work
Goebel has written several articles for the Evansville, Indiana arts and entertainment magazine News 4U.
[edit] References
- ^ [http://www.kctcs.edu/todaysnews/index.cfm?tn_date=2006-08-18 Write stuff: Henderson author among finalists for inaugural Dylan Thomas prize Writer: Judy Jenkins].
- ^ The Dylan Thomas Prize Long List.
- ^ Evansville Music Scene Forum Post.
[edit] External links
- Joey Goebel's Homepage
- Interview with Joey Goebel on TastesLikeChicken
- Interview with Joey Goebel on PopMatters
- Podcast Interview with Joey Goebel on misnomer.libsyn.com
- Joey doing a mockumentary for YouTube with his fiance
- Mass-Market Martyr John Hood's Bully Magazine review of Torture the Artist