“Line by tart line, Galanes gives us a curious and
even brave thing: a novel at once comic and heartbreaking.” –Los
Angeles Times
"[Regarding] fathers and Father's Day: This year
it's easy. Buy Dad a copy of Philip Galanes' hilarious
and brilliant first novel, Fathers Day." –The
New York Observer
“Galanes’s rapid-fire prose effortlessly gets
us into the head of his love-fixated New Yorker, thanks
primarily to his quick and quirky dialogue, which sounds
as if it really had been overheard on a phone line.” –Time
Out New York
“An important and promising new voice in gay fiction.” –San
Francisco Bay Times
"Philip Galanes makes his debut with a novel that
is both heartbreaking and deftly comic, the story of a
young man struggling with his most primitive desires--wanting
and needing. It is a novel about the complex relationships
between parents and children, a story of loss and of our
unrelenting need for acknowledgment, to be seen as who
we are. And in the end it is simply a love story for our
time." –A. M. Homes
“An utterly readable tale. . . . Galanes succeeds
at painting complicated, tender as well as racy moments
of desperation.” –Hamptons Magazine
“This is not your typical debut novel. . . . Philip
Galanes is a powerful writer, and he deserves praise for
bucking typical expectations of a first novel.” –Dallas
Voice
“Father’s Day is about dealing with loss and
grief . . . it will absolutely make its readers want to
pick up the phone and call their dads.” –The
Weekly News
"In Matthew Vaber, Philip Galanes has created a delightful
paradox, a character both superficial and profound, casual-sounding
yet compulsive, very funny and borderline desperate--in
short, a classic human being. As Matthew himself might
say, Father's Day is High Noon in loafers." –Mark
O'Donnell
“Father’s Day pulls you in every bit as much
as the classic ‘The Snows of Kilimanjaro.’ .
. . Galanes’s writing is truly a pleasure to read,
staccato sentences, finely noted details, and quirky metaphors
that are meant to be savored.” –EDGE Boston
"Philip Galanes has fashioned a novel both bleak
and funny about a young man's struggle to sort out his
troubled love: the too-strong love for his mother, the
too-weak love for his suicidal father, and the all-consuming
love of anonymous sexual encounters. Pointed and acute,
this story tells of the narrator's many betrayals of others
and their many betrayals of him. It exists in an uncomfortable
moral space where the humor of terrible things sometimes
outweighs, but never obscures, their poignancy." –Andrew
Solomon
“Father’s Day is about dealing with loss and
grief . . . it will absolutely make its readers want to
pick up the phone and call their dads.” –The
Weekly News