Fiction Goodwillie's debut novel,
American Subversive, was published by Scribner in 2010. Hailed as "genuinely thrilling" by
The New Yorker, and "a triumphant work of fiction" by the
Associated Press, it was a
New York Times Notable Book an Editors' Choice of 2010 and a
Vanity Fair and
Publishers Weekly top ten spring debut. His second novel,
Kings County, sold to
Simon & Schuster in September 2017, in what
Publishers Marketplace described as a "significant deal". Published in 2020, it was an Editors' Choice for
The New York Times and a finalist for the 2021 Gotham Book Prize. Reviewing
Kings County in
The New York Times, Adelle Waldman called it, "a suspenseful read...Goodwillie is a stylish writer, smart and witty without being a show-off...[His] characters are so likable, so sincere in their affection and decent in their moral decision making...A very good new novel."
Nonfiction Goodwillie's first book, the memoir
Seemed Like a Good Idea at the time, was published by Algonquin Books in 2006. Written partly at the Chelsea Hotel, it tells the story of his journey through downtown Manhattan as he struggles to become a writer. The
Louisville Courier-Journal called it a "mesmerizing memoir and searing sketch of a decade in decline...[Goodwillie] conveys his wisdom via syntax that is simultaneously sobering insightful and amusing." But Toby Young, in a Wall Street Journal take down, wrote that, "There were moments in this book when I wished [Goodwillie] hadn't given up his day job." He has written several investigative features for national magazines, including a 2012 cover story on "Nuclear Divers" for
Popular Science and an exposé on the Italian Mafia's activities in Manhattan's garment trucking industry for the Fall 1997 issue of
BlackBook magazine. Goodwillie has written about books for
The New York Times and
The Daily Beast, and his fiction and nonfiction have appeared in
New York Magazine,
Newsweek,
Popular Science, ''
Men's Health, BlackBook, The New York Observer, The New York Post, The Rumpus and Deadspin''.
TV/Film On April 6, 2022,
The Hollywood Reporter announced that
Kings County had been optioned as a TV series by producers
Lindsay Shookus and Jessie Creel, and is being adapted by Emmy and Peabody Award-winning writer
Allison Silverman. ==References==