'Playworld is a novel that is a time machine of a kind, if they were ever used to seek revelations. I was reintroduced to an American history I lived through, and so much of what I had never known I’d forgotten, so much of what I was never taught to fear—but perhaps should have been. This was not my story but I saw mine in it—a boy lost in the house of adulthood, trying to learn how to be one of the people he sees around him. Haunting, mesmerizing, provoking—this novel is a triumph.' —Alexander Chee, author of How to Write an Autobiographical Novel 'Playworld is an astonishing, immersive novel that deserves a place in the pantheon of Great New York Novels. I loved this book for its textures, its music, and its moral accounting of ordinary life and ordinary time. And the characters! What characters! This is a late-breaking classic and might very well be Ross’s masterpiece.' —Brandon Taylor, author of The Late Americans 'What do you say about a book this good? In its unsentimental scrutinizing of a boy put to use by the adults around him—the coach, the family friend, the family shrink—Playworld is a revelation. Griffin Hurt’s life is so real it glows.' —Matthew Klam, author of Who Is Rich? 'Playworld just about tore my heart out. In this novel about a child actor, it’s tough to know who’s doing most of the acting, young Griffin, the protagonist, or the adults who surround him and seem determined to break him to pieces. This is a big book, one about growing up. By the time I finished, I felt like I’d also done some growing up alongside Griffin. Adam Ross is a hell of a talent.' —Elliot Ackerman, author of Dark at the Crossing 'A wonderful, full-bodied, modern-yet-old-school novel that brings the New York City of the 1980s to vibrant life. Ross will make you laugh and break your heart. I haven’t felt this immersed in a work of fiction in a long time.' —Harlan Coben, author of Think Twice 'Few writers are blessed enough to write an untouchable book. Adam Ross is one of them. Set during a trickle-down ’80s we are now ready to make sense of, Playworld will have you so convincingly wrapped up in young Griffin’s world of romance and anxiety that you will pine for lost days. Patient, propulsive, spooled with Nabokovian detail, this novel broke open my heart’s floodgates in the way that the best literature does.' —Sidik Fofana, author of Stories from the Tenants Downstairs 'In this magnificent novel, Adam Ross pulls off a literary hat trick: Playworld is at once an elegy for a very particular time and place, an intimate portrait of one family that then sweeps the reader into a multitude of fascinating worlds, and a tour-de-force of a coming-of-age story with an unforgettable boy at its center. I loved it.' —Dani Shapiro, author of Signal Fires'Playworld is the story not so much of a sentimental education as a plunge into the deep end of adulthood. Adam Ross has given us a masterful novel, one that deftly sets Griffin Hurt’s coming of age amid the rise of Reagan and the get-mine-first ethos that would come to characterize so much of American life in the coming decades. This novel is, in short, the world in full, and flat-out brilliant on every page.' —Ben Fountain, author of Devil Makes Three 'Griffin Hurt is a teenage narrator as fully realized and fumbling for meaning as William Styron’s ever-searching Stingo, and is destined to become one of the twenty-first century’s most beloved protagonists. You don’t just fall in love with him, you’re transformed into a kind of devoted surrogate parent. Playworld is a marvel.' —Hannah Pittard, author of Listen to Me 'It’s difficult to overpraise Playworld’s tragicomic scope, dazzling ambition, categorical brilliance. Ross writes so close to the bone that I winced while reading. And while young Griffin is brutalized and betrayed by the adults putting him through his sentimental education, Playworld is never hopeless. It instead reinforces our faith in art, that it can make and save a life. I have not read a book this weighty and soulful since I put it down, and I doubt I will again.' —Stephanie Danler, author of Sweetbitter 'A modern masterpiece, sharp and breathtaking and wise. Griffin, the young man at the center of this vivid bildungsroman, is someone you’d follow forward and backward and anywhere—across the sweaty mats of the high school wrestling team into a steamed-up car for a wildly sexy and heartbreakingly human relationship with an older, married woman, and then into the glittering world of child acting. Remarkable.' —Lisa Taddeo, author of Three Women