“In this modern age of madness, we’re so often made to carry more than we believe we can manage. And it’s this struggle—to wake up and persist in the face of promised hardship—that Jeff Boyd so brilliantly captures.” —Mateo Askaripour, The New York Times Book Review

"[A] delightful debut...Boyd's writing is preternaturally wise, and his characters come to life with natural dialogue and brutally honest confrontations. This pulses with the beat of life." —Publishers Weekly

“The Weight is filled with haunting observations about romance, isolation and the daunting task of believing in something greater than yourself. Boyd has a grounded and capable hand. This is dialogue that you can actually hear. Powerful, dreamy, and altogether very true.”—Kiley Reid, author of the New York Times bestseller and Booker Prize longlist selection Such a Fun Age

”Boyd has August Wilson's scope and James Alan McPherson's human heart, but his literary touchstones are wide and catholic, and his passion and intelligence inform every page of his novel The Weight. I think of this book as the announcement of a big new talent and the start of a long and meaningful career."—Joshua Ferris, author of the National Book Award finalist Then We Came to the End and A Calling for Charlie Barnes

“You’ve never met a fictional character quite like Julian Strickland, the soulful, searching character at the heart of Jeff Boyd’s wondrous new novel, The Weight. It’s a delight to watch him drum, stumble and sleep his way across the pale, smoky clubs of Portland, Oregon in this moving, comic and prodigious debut.”—Jess Walter, author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Beautiful Ruins and The Cold Millions

“As a reader, Jeff Boyd’s writing is the kind you love: he builds a world and inhabits it with round, flawed, real people. His astute observations and wry humor pull you in but his characters make you stay. As a writer, Jeff’s writing is the kind of thing that makes you bang your head against the wall wondering, ‘How the F did he do that!? How did he make this insane, complicated, thing feel as easy as the riff of a jazz bass line.’ In The Weight, Boyd somehow skewers liberal Portland while implicating all of us and, in a truly pertinent way, ask what it means to really be ‘accepting of self.’”—Xochitl Gonzalez, author of the New York Times bestseller Olga Dies Dreaming

"Boyd writes beautifully about music and does a superb job of creating characters who love it and each other. Readers will want an encore."—Booklist