"Treats the genre with a refreshingly grounded tone." --
SFX "Issues of marginalisation and prejudice are at the heart of The Nobody People, with Proehl eschewing spandex superheroics in favour of a grounded, realistic approach." --Financial Times
"A haunting story of empowerment, persecution, and otherness that resonates with contemporary relevance." --Starburst
"Proehl s writing is skillful and a joy to consume he pulls the reader deep into his world...as a reader you ride that rollercoaster alongside the characters feeling every bump and dip." --The British Fantasy Society
"A hard hitting science fiction novel that may be fantastical in places but is based very much in our own world...A good read for a fan of super hero fiction who would like to delve deeper into some of the themes and sit under the genre." --SF Book
"This isn t about superheroes, costumed adventurers that go out into the wider world to battle villains. No, this is a story about real people and the prejudices that minorities face...I m eagerly waiting to see how it all ends." --Set the Tape
"An unputdownable read...A terrific read for those who want a contemporary adult version of the X-Men, which reflects the fears and optimism of our time." --SFF World
"A disturbing, unsettling view of modernity in which the real horrors are not actually these with scary superpowers, not even those who put such powers to harmful use, but the great, placid mass of unsocial, ordinary people. A very timely picture." --Blue Book Balloon
"The perfect blend of the wonder of X-Men with the no holds barred brutality of The Boys , but with a whole new level of complexity weaved in." --Crooks Books
"The Nobody People is really well written and I felt very connected to the characters" --The Book Lovers Boudoir
Bob Proehl is the author of A Hundred Thousand Worlds, a Booklist best book of the year. He has worked as a bookseller and programming director for Buffalo Street Books in Ithaca, New York, a DJ, a record store owner, and a bartender. He was a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellow in Fiction and a resident at the Saltonstall Arts Colony. His work has appeared on Salon, as part of the 33 1/3 book series, and in American Short Fiction.