Taipei was published on June 4. Early reviews were positive, including those from
New York Observer,
Elle,
The Globe And Mail, and
Slate. Mixed reviews included those from
New York Times and
National Public Radio, both of whose reviewers seemed to both "love and hate", as Dwight Garner said in his
New York Times review, Lin's book. In
The Daily Beast critic Emily Witt reviewed the book very positively:
Taipei is exactly the kind of book I hoped Tao Lin would one day write. He is one of the few fiction writers around who engages with contemporary life, rather than treating his writing online as existing in opposition to or apart from the hallowed analog space of the novel. He's consistently good for a few laughs and writes in a singular style already much imitated by his many sycophants on the Internet. Some people like Tao Lin for solely these reasons, or treat him as a sort of novelty or joke. But Lin can also produce the feelings of existential wonder that all good novelists provoke. His writing reveals the hyperbole in conversational language that we use, it seems, to make up for living lives where equanimity and well-adjustment are the most valued attributes, where human emotions are pathologized into illness: we do not fall in love, we become "obsessed"; we do not dislike, we "hate". We manipulate ourselves chemically to avoid acting "crazy."
Clancy Martin, reviewing for
New York Times Book Review, said: Here we have a serious, first-rate novelist putting all his skills to work.
Taipei is a love story, and although it's Lin's third novel it's also, in a sense, a classic first novel: it's semi-autobiographical (Lin has described it as the distillation of 25,000 pages of memory) and it's a bildungsroman, a coming-of-age story about a young man who learns, through love, that life is larger than he thought it was.
Taipei was listed as a best or favorite book of 2013 by the
Times Literary Supplement,
Evening Standard, Slate, Vice, Complex,
Village Voice, Bookforum, Buzzfeed, The Week, Salon, Maisonneuve, and other venues. ==Foreign editions==