A sharp, funny novel . . . a kind of update of Kurt Vonnegut . . . Wayne is an inheritor, too, of Vonnegut's style-winkingly funny, brisk, broadly satirical.” —L.A. Times
“Wise and grimly funny, Wayne's dyspeptic satire of the Trump years paints a vivid portrait of male misery.” —Esquire
“Wayne turns the smug woundedness of the contemporary liberal into an amusing social comedy that is, at its finest, a worthy successor to those seriocomic novels of Bellow.” —Brandon Taylor, author of REAL LIFE, in The New York Times Book Review
“There's perhaps no living writer better at chronicling the most crucial emotional flash points of the young modern male than Teddy Wayne.” —The A.V. Club
“The best summer 2022 novel . . . incredible hijinks of cringe-worthy humor . . . a page-turner . . . The ending is heart-pounding and fascinating . . . will probably make you think differently about how you feel about, well, everything.” —Fatherly
“A wickedly insightful novel about modern America.” —St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“A picture of the world as we know it, from the point of view of a funny, aggravating man, The Great Man Theory is an original and discomfiting portrait of the individual in the collective, as he tries to make his mark.” —Literary Hub's Most Anticipated List of the Year
“Wayne is a bard of male failure, insecurity, and resentment . . . a gifted writer with a talent for deft sketching . . . a canny mimic of the dialogue of the liberal chattering classes . . . The novel's plotting is tight, meticulous . . . The reader bounces between the brisk chapters.” —Washington Examiner
“An engrossing political novel... it asks a crucial question: What is an individual's responsibility to make the world better? . . . Perfectly tuned . . . Compelling.” —New York Journal of Books
“A compelling portrait of a man driven to the brink in a culture that he understands both all too well and not at all . . . produce[s] both winces and laughter . . . Part character study, part social satire, The Great Man Theory is fully a document of our troubled times.” —Bookreporter
“[A]n exquisite balancing act between the farcical and the devastatingly sad.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Wayne's attention to detail and language serves almost as a surgeon's scalpel, gently peeling back layered topicsfriendship, class, sexualityto reveal an engrossing survey of male insecurity and frailty.” —Salon on APARTMENT
“A sharp, bitter critique of our culture wars, technological dependency, and general intellectual malaise.” —Vol. 1 Brooklyn