NANA KWAME ADJEI-BRENYAH is the New York Times-bestselling author of Friday Black. His work has appeared in The New York Times Book Review, Esquire, The Paris Review, and elsewhere. He was a National Book Foundation’s “5 Under 35” honoree, the winner of the PEN/Jean Stein Book Award and the Saroyan Prize, and a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle’s John Leonard Award for Best First Book, along with many other honors. Raised in Spring Valley, New York, he now lives in the Bronx.
*Finalist for the National Book Award for Fiction*
*One of the New York Times' Top Ten Books of the Year*
*Finalist for the Goodreads Choice Awards*
*Longlisted for the New American Voices Awards*
*Longlisted for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize*
*Longlisted for the Aspen Words Literary Prize*
*Longlisted for the Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction*
Named A Best Book of the Year by:
New York Times Book Review, NPR, Washington Post, the New York
Public Library, Goodreads, Book Riot, Polygon, Financial Times,
Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, Shelf Awareness, and The Northforker
*May Selection for The Today Show’s Read With Jenna Book Club*
*Roxane Gay’s May Selection for the Audacious Book Club*
*A New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice*
*New York Times Notable Book of the Year*
“This book will change you!...A masterpiece.”
—Jenna Bush Hager, The Today Show’s #ReadWithJenna
“An act of protest…in a voice that belongs only to Adjei-Brenyah,
who bends the lurid into the lyrical—pretty words about hideous
deeds. Some of his best fight sentences sound as if Joe Rogan had
fallen into a trance and assumed the diction and rhythms of Toni
Morrison. If you recoil at that unholy fusion, that’s kind of the
point; and the author keeps pulling off this shock, page after
page…There’s more than a little George Saunders in these high
jinks…The novel is a thorough display of authorial control…As the
plot careers forward, Adjei-Brenyah uses footnotes as tethers
between fiction and reality, reminding us that his gladiatorial
farce is just a little tragicomic leap from an extant American
horror…The society in which [these characters] live defines them by
their worst deeds, but the writer of this novel refuses to.”
—New York Times Book Review
“[Adjei-Brenyah] belongs on anyone’s shortlist of great new
American writers.”
—Chicago Tribune
“Like Orwell’s 1984 and Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale,
Adjei-Brenyah’s book presents a dystopian vision so upsetting and
illuminating that it should permanently shift our understanding of
who we are and what we’re capable of doing…So raw and tragic and
primal is Chain-Gang All-Stars that despite its futuristic
elements, it has the patina of some timeworn epic…Shockingly
intimate and moving.”
—Washington Post
“Epic…Intoxicating…It is a testament to Adjei-Brenyah’s
idiosyncratic talents as a satirist that this premise…feels
disquietingly plausible by the novel’s end.”
—The Atlantic
“Chain-Gang All-Stars is an extension of everything Adjei-Brenyah
does so well: juggle love with death, satire with pain, the
impossible with the possible…In ballad-like chapters, which move
with the speed and emotional care of anime fight scenes,
Adjei-Brenyah weaves a world of sci-fi torture and bloody profit,
but a world not totally scrubbed of hope. In doing so, he doesn’t
reinvent the genre novel so much as make it his own. The new
maestro of dystopian lit has arrived.”
—Wired
“Vividly imaginative and startling in its clarity of
intent...A sort of The Hunger Games meets Gladiator meets
WWE meets the modern private prison system.”
—Elle
“Chain-Gang All-Stars surpasses all expectations…Adjei-Brenyah’s
acerbic vision lands like a lightning bolt of truth.”
—Esquire
"Gladiator meets Mad Max at the penal colony in the brutal,
world-building latest from Adjei-Brenyah."
—Entertainment Weekly
“So shocking and moving that it might just wake us up.”
—Ron Charles, CBS’ Sunday Morning
“[A] ferocious debut novel…[An] indicting commentary on a nation
unmoored from its morality…Adjei-Brenyah does not flinch. Neither
does he miss his targets, because he has the stiff winds of history
at his back…With Chain-Gang All-Stars he lets us think we’re
reading a satire, but soon reveals a mirror of our dystopian days
that lie not too far away.”
—Boston Globe
“A rumbustious satire of the criminal justice system, a book that
is far more entertaining than an attempt to convince its readers of
the case for prison abolition has any right to be.”
—The Guardian
"One of the most exciting young writers in America. His work is
urgent, engaging, wildly entertaining, formally bold, and
politically electrifying. Read one page, any page, and you'll see
what I mean.”
—George Saunders, author of Liberation Day
“A complex, brutal, beautiful, panoramic takedown of the
prison-industrial complex… At once original, its own fresh
creation, and clearly part of a lineage of American literature that
links the opening ‘Battle Royal’ chapter in Ralph Ellison's
Invisible Man to Native Son by Richard Wright, Soul on Ice by
Eldridge Cleaver and Soledad Brother by George
Jackson…Adjei-Brenyah's distinguished novel updates this tradition
to encompass our dizzying, barbaric, performative and capitalistic
digital age.”
—Minneapolis Star-Tribune
“Dazzling and mightily ambitious… A stunningly original and
unflinchingly honest piece of satiric genius, Chain-Gang All-Stars
not only showcases the horrific spectacle of the prison industrial
complex but highlights how everyone is somehow complicit.”
—Vulture, “Best Books of the Year So Far”
“A clear-eyed critique of our country's prison system, along with
the profit and racism inherent in them.”
—Salon
“[Adjei-Brenyah’s] gripping, maximalist fiction has created a new
paradigm for dystopian satire—and announced [him] as one of the
most exciting literary talents of his generation…With a burgeoning
body of work that is both painfully topical and thrillingly
cinematic, he sits at the vanguard of a new kind of novelist: the
writer as not just an artist and an entertainer but a true humanist
capable of attracting vast, untapped readerships. The result is
equal parts exhilarating and profound…[Chain-Gang All-Stars] throbs
with a soulful, anarchic intimacy, girded by vivid backstories that
burrow beneath the hard-drawn fault lines of race and class and
whatever constitutes a ‘criminal’ mind. It’s also full of great
characters, with names so chewy they have an almost visceral
mouthfeel.”
—Esquire, “The End of the World, According to Nana Kwame
Adjei-Brenyah”
“Adjei-Brenyah’s writing transports us to a crossroads of love and
pain, life and death, oppressor and oppressed, real and
speculative…The complicated interplay between the fictional story
on the page and the very real critique Adjei-Brenyah invokes
produces a novel that resists a long history of American culture
burdening Black literature with the mark of sentimentalism…He
conjures a captivating world in Chain-Gang All-Stars that treads
the line between the possible and impossible; as readers, we are
arrested by the truths that feel uncomfortably easy to identify in
our own world today…Chain-Gang All-Stars, in its refusal to provide
an easy blueprint for eradicating egregious regimes like the prison
industrial complex, makes the simple (but not easy) request that we
linger with the ugly contradictions undercutting American society
and the human condition. While we cannot wipe our hands clean,
perhaps, in this reckoning, we might be able to glean something
that looks like transformation. Perhaps, there, life can be
precious once more.”
—Los Angeles Review of Books
“Given how incredible his debut collection was and is, it is no
surprise to me that Adjei-Brenyah’s debut novel is this
extraordinary! Told with bold, muscular prose, this book is filled
with surprising tenderness. Some of the best and most beautiful
descriptions of action and violence I have ever read, which is not
to say the book celebrates violence so much as it uses violence to
explore American incarceration by imagining it as spectacle. As big
as it is dazzling. Just wild how good and original this book is. A
revelation!”
—Tommy Orange, author of There, There
“A masterpiece. He is brilliant and sensitive, and he manages to
write about things that matter (to him and to us) while drawing on
a panoply of influences, from hip-hop to anime to 19th-century
Russian literature, which enables him to deeply engage the widest
possible audience, an ability I very much admire.”
—Jennifer Croft, New York Times Book Review’s “By the Book”
“A visceral, heart-wrenching read that treats systemic issues with
delightfully speculative skepticism and broken people with
compassion and dignity.”
—Shondaland
"As vital as it is brutal. Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah illuminates
darkness with the electricity of his prose. The massive weight of
the subject is matched by the sheer scope of Adjei-Brenyah's
imagination. A startling, important novel that will inspire and
inform many conversations."
—Charles Yu, author of Interior Chinatown
“A cross between Gladiator and The Hunger Games...[An] acclaimed
master of our futuristic nightmares…a keen observer of racial and
socioeconomic disparities that result in a high number of Black
people incarcerated. While this is set in the future, it feels
uncomfortably close to the present.”
—Oprah Daily
"A brutal, heart-wrenching story that feels so close to reality...A
tale of survival and resistance in an unfair prison system...about
a group of prisoners who decide to fight to the death for the one
thing they want most: freedom."
—Cosmopolitan
“A defiant, awe-inspiring novel that will be read, studied, and
celebrated for generations, Chain-Gang All-Stars leads with love.
Adjei-Brenyah writes with stunning compassion and moral clarity as
he interrogates every facet of our carceral world and the American
spectacle of violence, never losing sight of the human cost of
systemic injustice. Readers will be forever changed by this
book.”
—Jessamine Chan, author of The School for Good Mothers
“Remarkable, cinematic.”
—Joumana Khatib, “The Book Review” podcast from New York Times
“Adjei-Brenyah’s sentences are nimble, his chapters brisk yet full
of brio. He knows what he’s doing, and it’s this innate authority
that makes Chain-Gang All-Stars so compelling—right up to the
final, fatal blow.”
—The Telegraph
“Indelible…Deservedly acclaimed, Adjei-Brenyah is as commanding a
storyteller as he is a world-builder, and drives the action
inexorably towards the only possible conclusion.”
—Daily Mail
“This is my favorite book so far of 2023, a novel that takes a hard
look at us, at reality TV, at complicity, at the way too many of us
see violence as justice. It asks us tough questions about how we
treat bodies that we judge unfit for the system. It’s also full of
cinematic action-packed fight scenes, heart-breaking twists, and a
queer sapphic romance. What’s not to love?”
—Book Riot
“It's thrilling, it's fast paced…Adjei-Brenyah deftly incorporates
facts about prison, inviting readers to take a closer, empathetic
look at America's prison system.”
—Kathy Burnette, MPR’s “Ask a Bookseller”
“One of the most original and thought-provoking novels to be
published in recent memory…The prose is very beautiful, and the
plot and character arcs are heartbreaking. The pacing is excellent,
and I was invested from start to finish. All in
all, Chain-Gang All-Stars is the whole package…It held me
in thrall and will surely be one of my favorite books of the
year.”
—Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star
“Adjei-Brenyah’s novel punches hard…The world Adjei-Brenyah has
created sings with the humanity of its characters…I’m not sure what
to do about the prison-industrial complex. But I think that maybe
the first step is to share books like Chain-Gang All-Stars.”
—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“Chain-Gang All-Stars makes explicit how the spirit erodes as the
body becomes currency. Adjei-Brenyah writes sharply about the
economy of spectacle and the fickle alchemy between futility and
hope.”
—Raven Leilani, author of Luster
“In a narrative world where the real is growingly more unbelievable
than the make believe, Chain-Gang All-Stars is an uncanny, singular
feat of literature. I’ve never read satire so bruising, so brolic,
so tender and really, so pitch-perfect. It’s nuts brilliant. Just
read it!”
—Kiese Laymon, author of Heavy: An American Memoir
"Adjei-Brenyah may have the buzziest book of the year...A ferocious
attack on America's for-profit prison systems."
—Goodreads' Most Anticipated Books of 2023
“Epic… Like a more politically committed Infinite Jest, it
teems with the voices of broken people, virtuoso prose and
footnotes which provide facts about America’s real carceral state
and characters’ backstories…Involving and affecting…The writing is
poignant and poetic…A novel to immerse yourself in this summer and
think about long after.”
—iNews
“Masterful…Chain-Gang All-Stars’ depiction of a racist,
hyper-capitalist carceral state is an undeniable echo of our world,
but it’s not the only one. At the heart of this book is the
capacity of incarcerated people to resist and rewrite the rules of
their imprisonment.”
—Electric Literature
“A satirical and searing novel that never loses touch of its
characters’ beating hearts.”
—Lincoln Michel, BOMB
“One of our generation’s most exciting writers.”
—Chicago Review of Books
“[A] blazing debut novel…A damning indictment of mass
incarceration, systemic racism, and the grotesqueries of unfettered
American capitalism, Chain-Gang All-Stars is also a breathless
dystopian thriller.”
—Lit Hub
"Adjei-Brenyah’s debut novel is equal parts Squid Game and Riot
Baby, but also brought to mind Ralph Ellison’s Invisible
Man…Adjei-Brenyah writes characters that are both larger than life
and intimately human…It is funny, it is brutal, and it is an
extremely necessary text.”
—Tor.com
“With Chain-Gang All-Stars, Adjei-Brenyah has taken his fiction to
a whole new level.”
—WPR’s “Beta
“A transformative, clear-eyed critique. Chain-Gang
All-Stars is a feat of world-building and Juvenalian satire
that is also an indictment…Kinetic, ambitious…Deeply moral and
informed but not preachy. Its correspondences with the US
[carceral] system always serve the story and relentlessly heighten
its stakes. [Adjei-Brenyah] distills and dramatizes the genius of
the abolition community and its decades of work into a new kind of
allegorical fiction—one with a whole movement behind it.”
—4Columns
“It is brilliant, it is brutal. This book is going to win so many
awards!”
—Liberty Hardy, WBEZ’s “Nerdette”
“With his sharp eye for satire and reverence for humanity,
Adjei-Brenyah’s latest explores the exploitation, violence, and
false promises of the prison industrial complex, capitalism, and
the country itself.”
—The Millions
“Having burst on the literary scene with his 2019 collection Friday
Black, [Adjei-Brenyah’s] debut novel matches, even surpasses, the
roiling, vibrant energy of his shorter fiction, delivering both an
impassioned critique of America’s broken justice system and a
heartrending queer love story…A novel that eschews didacticism and
instead provokes discussion…The true power of Chain-Gang All-Stars
is that the dystopia it depicts no longer reads like a fanciful
thought experiment but a horrible foreshadowing of the future.”
—Locus
"A brutal, futuristic view of a
gladiatorial privatization of our current prison system.
[Adjei-Brenyah] does an incredible job of creating stories that
take you beyond the edge of your tolerance, urging you to see the
parallel social commentary beneath. I always have to take a moment
to catch my breath when I set his work down and this full-length
work is leaving me gulping for air and truth."
—Carrie Koepke from Skylark Books, Columbia Daily Tribune
“Chain-Gang All-Stars should pique your interest if titles
like Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower and Atwood's
Handmaid's Tale are more your vibe.”
—The Week
“At once a kaleidoscopic, imaginative examination of America’s
unjust prison system, and a fantasy-tinged spectacle, Chain-Gang
All-Stars is likely to excite and provoke in equal measure.”
—Our Culture
“A searing debut with an unforgettable voice, Chain-Gang All-Stars
will force you to reevaluate what freedom in America really
means.”
—Lit-Reactor
"A brilliant and cutting send-off of reality television,
football, and mass incarceration."
—CrimeReads
“Fantastically confident, nimble, entertaining and
impassioned…[Adjei-Brenyah] ultimately asks us to reassess our
tired, harmful thinking about what prison is really for. He demands
that we imagine something better.”
—Times Literary Supplement
“Enthralling…An unmissable read.”
—The Independent
“Breathtaking and pulse-pounding…Adjei-Brenyah delivers insightful
critiques of the prison-industrial complex, capitalism, and the
ways in which Hollywood and celebrity culture exploit Black talent.
Both the political allegory and the edge-of-your-seat action work
beautifully. Readers will be wowed.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“An acerbic, poignant, and, at times, alarmingly pertinent
dystopian novel…In his debut short story collection, Friday Black,
Adjei-Brenyah displayed a prodigious flair for deadpan satiric
narratives set in alternate realities that often seem uncomfortably
close to our own, especially regarding race and class divisions.
With his first novel, he proves he can sustain his outrage,
imagination, wit, and compassion for a deeper dive into the darker
reaches of the American soul…Adjei-Brenyah displays his impressive
range of tone and voice…It is an up-to-the-minute j’accuse that
speaks to the eternal question of what it truly means to be free.
And human. Imagine The Hunger Games refashioned into a rowdy,
profane, and indignant blues shout at full blast.”
—Kirkus, starred review
“Searingly entertaining.”
—Publishers Weekly, “An Interview with the Year 2023”
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |