Joshua Ferris (born November 8, 1974) is an American author best known for his debut novel Then We Came to the End (2007). The novel is a comedy about the American workplace, is narrated in the first-person plural, and is set in a fictitious Chicagoad agency facing challenges at the end of the 1990s Internet boom.
In August 2008, The New Yorker published Ferris's short story "The Dinner Party", which earned him a nomination for the Shirley Jackson Awards. Another story, "A Night Out", was published in Tin House's tenth-anniversary issue. Other short fiction has appeared in Best New American Voices 2007 and New Stories from the South 2007. His nonfiction has appeared in the anthologies State by State and Heavy Rotation. The New Yorker included him in its 2010 "20 Under 40" list.
Ferris's second novel, The Unnamed, was published in January 2010. It garnered many prominent, although mixed, reviews. Kirkus Reviews called it "audacious, risky and powerfully bleak, with the author's unflinching artistry its saving grace."[1] The New York Times review, by novelist Jay McInerney, called it "a road novel with severe tunnel vision.โ[2]