"Strike up the band: there's a new R.L. Maizes (We Love Anderson Cooper; Other People's Pets) book, and it's breakoutnovel time—or at least it should be. As a funnypitiless look at the lengths writers will go to get published, A Complete Fiction deserves shelf space alongside Percival Everett's Erasure and Jean Hanff Korelitz's The Plot."—Shelf Awareness (starred review)
"A Complete Fiction is also the best kind of fiction, timely and topical, brimming with flawed characters trying to be good, complex situations with no right answers, and tangled threads that only get knottier as you turn the pages. R.L. Maizes has written a smart, compelling novel about publishing and its perils, families and friendships and their limitations, and storytelling itself, in all its wondrous messy glory."—Laurie Frankel, author of Family Family and This Is How It Always Is
“I loved this witty and completely absorbing novel. Maizes has compassion for her characters and their very real mistakes, and she allows them to negotiate the varying degrees of harm they do one another with artful nuance. The underdogs, in Maizes’ inspired telling, transcend themselves.” —Elizabeth McKenzie, author of The Dog of the North and The Portable Veblen
"I can't gush enough about R.L. Maizes's A Complete Fiction, one of the most fabulously complex, interesting, and hilarious novels I've read in years. As two protagonists fight (and fight dirty) over their respective truths, Maizes asks hard questions about cancel culture, power, politics, sexual abuse, and narrative that make me interrogate my own values. Maizes's sensitivity in tackling difficult topics further underscores the bravery and badassery of this unputdownable book. Read it, read it! And then talk to me, because I can't stop thinking about it." —Erika Krouse, author of Tell Me Everything: The Story of a Private Investigation, Winner of the 2023 Edgar Award
"Fastpaced and tightly wrought, R. L. Maizes’ new novel A Complete Fiction goes right to the mercenary hearts of two writers and with humor and pathos manages to skewer the publishing industry and the pressure cooker of literary social media simultaneously. We follow P.J. as she longs to publish a first novel and George, an editor, who turned her down for writing a book that he may or may not have plagiarized from her. Rooting for both with laugh out loud moments, I raced to the conclusion to find out how it would end." —Bethany Ball, author of The Pessimists and What to do About the Solomons
"A Complete Fiction checks all of the boxes for an incredible read that sits at the intersection of cancel culture and #metoo. It's packed full of contemporary anxiety, it's hilarious in moments, and it's a pageturner where readers will get a true joy out of being a fly on the wall to the conversations between characters. Maizes surfaces the absurdity of modern life, but in the way your smartest and most empathetic friend would. This novel is a beach read for people who also care about the cultural zeitgeist." —Wendy J. Fox, author of What If We Were Somewhere Else and If the Ice Had Held
"The question of who has a right to tell a story fuels A Complete Fiction with righteous anger and verve. But R.L. Maizes turns the battles roiling publishing and society into a nuanced and humorous portrait of two flawed writers struggling to be heard. Through a twisting plot, revealing the complexity behind impulsive social media posts, we end up having empathy for the accused and the accuser. It's a difficult feat that Maizes pulls off beautifully." —Arsen Kashkashian, Head Buyer and General Manager, Boulder Bookstore
"R. L. Maizes’s blend of humor and empathy is a rare alchemy. In A Complete Fiction, she is at the height of her powers. Maizes takes the universal elements of family and truth and places them within the world of contemporary publishing and politics. The result is a propulsive, funny, complex, and deeply original novel."—Kevin Wilson, author of Run for the Hills