"10 books to read in winter 2020: It’s a new literary year" —Laura Pearson, Chicago Tribune "Most Anticipated Small Press Books of 2020" —John Madera, Big Other "Most Anticipated Books of 2020" --Volumes Bookcafe (Chicago, IL) "13 Books CHIRB Staff Read In January 2020" —Chicago Review of Books
"The condition of Whiteout Conditions is the North American sublime, a grim, gnomic, hilarious dialect Tariq Shah inherits from Denis Johnson, Don DeLillo, the Coen Brothers, The Jesus Lizard, and Colson Whitehead. Like an icy sidewalk, Shah's deadpan wit and verbal wizardry will knock you flat on your ass." —Jess Row, author of Your Face in Mine and White Flights
"In the brutal and beautiful Whiteout Conditions, a wasted road trip through America’s suburban wastelands becomes an exploration of mortality, mercy and the mysteries of the human heart. Tariq Shah’s sharp and surprising prose is the perfect vehicle for this bleakly comic novel, in which sparks of transcendence intermittently light up the dark." --David Gates, author of Jernigan and A Hand Reached Down to Guide Me
"Tariq Shah’s haunting novel Whiteout Conditions has the atmospheric rush of a winter fever dream. In his indelible main characters, Ant and Vince, Shah has created a quasi-brotherly relationship of sparring that reveals within their mutual antagonism an ultimate tenderness." --Betsy Bonner, author of Round Lake andThe Book of Atlantis Black: The Search for a Sister Gone Missing
"Tariq Shah is one of the most daring young writers I’ve encountered, and Whiteout Conditions is a real original. Unsentimental, crisp, and ruthlessly cool, it is also surprisingly tender, with moments of great warmth and heart." —Taylor Plimpton, author of Notes from the Night: A Life After Dark
"Written with stark lyricism, Whiteout Conditions is an unforgettable novel about an estranged young man, his reckless search for meaning around his post-suburban hometown, and the impossible beauty of redemption. A hell of a ride." —Lee Clay Johnson, author of Nitro Mountain
“Shah’s Whiteout Conditions delivers a brutal, cold and haunting tale, but does so with compassion, warmth and tenderness. The success in writing such contradictions is testament to the skill of an insightful new author possessing a rare talent. I couldn’t imagine a better title to be our first US acquisition.” —Nathan Connolly, publishing director of Dead Ink Books (Liverpool, UK) / "Dead Ink makes first US acquisition" by Ruth Comerford, The Bookseller
"If you have ever watched two guys push a car up an expressway ramp midwinter, you have had a glimpse into Tariq Shah’s outstanding short novel, Whiteout Conditions. The deadening cold. The unspoken accusation. The lost point of the journey in the first place. All the stuff left along the roadway at winter’s end offers a stage for Shah’s novel—an “on the road” become “just over the border” into Wisconsin." –Garin Cycholl, Rain Taxi Review
"The larger setting of Whiteout Conditions—the dead-end suburbs of Chicago—is also aptly delineated. The Midwest’s harsh winter weather chases Ant and Vince throughout the novel, particularly in its fevered final pages. And the community that Ant grew up in should be broadly recognizable to those of us who grew up in similar communities, even outside the Midwest. Whiteout Conditions’ suburbs—the idleness, the inertia that pervades them—remind me of the small town in southern New Mexico where I grew up." –Thea De Armond, Cleveland Review of Books
"I admire the clarity Shah’s prose has in showing the often fraught nature of communication in male friendships. Conversations between Ant and his friend Vince are cloaked in half-truths, anger and indifference. Just as the two are at the precipice of saying what they need to say, the masks come out." –Phillip Russel, Unwinnable.com
"'Funerals are kind of fun,' the narrator of Shah’s debut admits in the opening pages. 'I’ve cultivated a taste.' Then his childhood friend dies, and the narrator must brave a blizzard to pay his respects." —Azam Ahmed, New York Times "Recent Books of Interest"
"Whiteout Conditions contains the language of a poet-turned-fiction writer... and the beauty of the phrasing is often in pointed contrast to the goofy stupidity of the characters’ actions... Whiteout Conditions is a book concerned with toxic masculinity’s erasure of the self; it’s walls and moats. In the face of death, Ant and Vince concentrate on hurting each other, drinking, taking drugs, pursuing inadvisable revenge plots — anything to plug the hole where their heartache dwells." —Caryl Pagel, Full Stop
"A dazzling narrative about loss, coping mechanisms, and vengeance." —Ruth Minah Buchwald, Electric Literature, "20 New Asian American Books to Read Right Now"
"Ant is borderline obsessed with funerals, likening the events to weddings as gatherings he looks forward to. Yet, when a childhood friend passes, Ant’s veneer starts to crumble. Weirdly funny, Whiteout Conditions tracks Ant and his friend Vince as they make their way through Chicogoland’s suburbs, which, in Shah’s telling, are as harrowing as any arctic climate." —Wendy J. Fox, BuzzFeed '15 Small Press Books To Kick Off Your 2020 Reading Season'
"In this slim but memorable debut novel, Ant, who lives on the East Coast, flies home to Illinois to attend the funeral of one of his oldest friends, Ray. Picking him up from the airport is Ray’s cousin, Vince. Together they set out to drive to the funeral while untangling old hurts, popping Oxy, and grappling with adulthood’s disillusionments." —Tomi Obaro, BuzzFeed 'Most Highly Anticipated Books Of 2020'
"Like a poetic venture through the stubborn feelings of men, this short debut novel from Tariq Shah takes an uncomfortable look at loss, grief, and the lengths people go to avoid feeling pain." —Jaylynn Korrell, Independent Book Review
"With a resolution that binds the human to the animal, the autonomous to the bestial, Whiteout Conditions renders a synthesis of propitiation and cruelty that is as palpable as it is blinding." --Nathan Elias, Entropy
"Tariq Shah’s Whiteout Conditions is a slim book that, by centering on death, allows its protagonist to explore life... Shah leads us through a taut exploration of grief, masculinity, and revenge with a deft hand." —Jesi Buell, Heavy Feather Review
"The protagonist of the short novel, Ant, attends a funeral, which would affect him more if he didn’t enjoy funerals. A lot of it has to do with his history of loss, which makes for a stark, grim, yet hilarious perspective to explore timeless themes." —Michael J. Seidlinger, Publishers Weekly, '15 New and Forthcoming Indie Press Gems'
"The grip of this thing squeezes well past its 110 pages. A little of this, a little of that, but reductive comparisons are no use here because Shah has taken the best qualities of existing tropes and made them his own. A wild, dangerous game of dodge ball played in the farthest corner of fiction's playground." —Wesley Minter,Third Place Books (Seattle, WA)
"Boldly dark, strangely funny, and surprisingly sincere in its toughness." —Kassie Rose, The Longest Chapter
"When people list things that they enjoy, funerals generally aren't one them. Ant finds joy in attending funerals. Yet, when the cousin of his childhood friend dies Ant is less enthused about attending. On its surface, Whiteout Conditions is a road trip story set against the backdrop of Midwest Suburbia. As the story progresses it becomes more of a rumination on loss, grief, and the ghosts in our rearview mirrors." —Quinn Illgen,Changing Hands (Tempe, AZ)
"Dark and visual, Whiteout Conditions is a slow motion skid on black ice of a book. You might not want to keep reading, but it will be very hard to stop. Just steer into the skid. Well done, Tariq Shah." —Mary O'Malley,Anderson's Bookshop (Naperville, IL)
"Whiteout Conditions is both disorienting and visceral, hilarious and heartbreaking." —Michael Welch, Chicago Review of Books
"Whiteout Conditions, Tariq Shah’s slim but powerful debut novel, focuses on grief, loss, and friendship in lyrical and stunning prose." —Laura Spence-Ash, Ploughshares
"Shah reminds you that even though he's written a novel, he's still a poet... Whiteout Conditions explores how nostalgia and toxic masculinity operate (and fail) as a conduit for grief." —Rima Parikh,Chicago Reader
"Mile by mile, an incoming blizzard paralleling the impending events and emotional landslide, this tale quietly grinds toward a gut-wrenching and unexpected conclusion." --Beth Mowbray, The Nerd Daily