CAT FITZPATRICK's debut novel, The Call-Out (Seven Stories Press, 2022), was awarded the 2023 Lambda Award for Transgender Fiction. She is the author of the poetry collection Glamour-puss (Topside Press, 2016), and the co-editor of the anthology Meanwhile, Elsewhere- Science Fiction & Fantasy from Transgender Writers, which won the ALA Stonewall Award for Literature. Fitzpatrick is the first trans woman Director of the Women's and Gender Studies program at Rutgers University-Newark, and she also serves as the Editrix at LittlePuss Press. The Dinner Party (Seven Stories Press, 2026) is her second novel in verse.
Cat Fitzpatrick's genre-bending novel in verse about queer (mostly trans) women is an homage to the Pushkin's Eugene Onegin, but set in contemporary Brooklyn. The weapon at these women's disposal is a charged one-the internet call out, a symptom of cancel culture. At stake is the precarity of a marginalized community, a picture developed in dark and hilarious rhyming form. -Electric Literature funny and queer and honest and dark and daring and brilliant -Michelle Tea, author of Black Wave The sweetest, truest tale in verse Of how we sloshed and spoke and swived. Of broken hearts and sweet reverse, 'Trans lit' and all it catalyzed. -Jackie Ess, author of Darryl Cat Fitzpatrick is on the short list of contemporary writers whose work is actually fun -Tommy Pico, Author of IRL How does Fitzpatrick do it? How does she see it all so clearly--the grace of trans women who play Zelda in gross apartments, the social maneuver behind the moral absolute, the loopy mores of the picnic, the queer lit reading, the library date? She's the heiress to Thackeray and Rochester, and we're so lucky to have this gossipy, glamorous, and vital novel: one all about justice and the messy queers who have to build it. - Jeanne Thornton, author of Summer Fun For fuck's sake! Am I seriously telling you that a novel-in-verse about Brooklyn trans girl drama is not only one of the funniest things I've read this year, but also one of the most skewering, perceptive, and empathetic looks at modern life?!? Yes I am, because it's absolutely true. If you don't read The Call-Out now, you'll just be sad your friends did it first. -Casey Plett, author of Little Fish Cat Fitzpatrick's novel-in verse, The Call-Out, turns t-girl gossip into fine art -McKenzie Wark, author of Reverse Cowgirl This is just fucking sonnets, Cat. -Imogen Binnie, author of Nevada