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Catriona Wright

    Catriona Wright explore les complexités de la connexion humaine à travers sa prose et ses vers émouvants. Son écriture plonge dans les dynamiques interpersonnelles, abordant souvent des thèmes à la fois intimes et universellement pertinents. Par un langage évocateur et des récits soigneusement élaborés, Wright révèle les subtiles nuances d'émotion et les courants sous-jacents qui façonnent nos relations. Son œuvre invite les lecteurs à réfléchir à leurs propres expériences et aux manières dont les individus s'influencent mutuellement.

    Continuity Errors
    Table Manners
    Difficult People
    • Difficult People

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,9(83)Évaluer

      Exploring the complexities of human behavior, this collection features a variety of difficult characters, from manipulators to self-deceivers, as they navigate their aspirations for fame, love, and acceptance. Each story delves into their flawed yet relatable quests, highlighting the universal struggle of being difficult in a world that demands conformity. Through humor and insight, the narratives reveal that everyone has their own challenges, ultimately celebrating the quirks that make us human.

      Difficult People
    • "A collection of poetry that investigates how food intersects with gender, sexuality, culture, and class. Borrowing from the language and logic of dumpster divers, dieters, foodies and competitive eaters, it explores how our choices about the production, preparation and consumption of food signify our individual and collective identities."--

      Table Manners
    • "Feminist poems both serious and absurd that question our obsession with productivity instead of with care. Continuity Errors questions the privileging of work and productivity over rest and care from an ecological and feminist perspective. These lyric, prose, and persona poems situate themselves within the domestic sphere of childbirth and childcare where different voices—many fantastical or historical—and registers—from corporate euphemism to earnest confessional—explore preoccupations around what roles innovation and maintenance play in our lives. In Manifesto for Maintenance Art 1969!, Mierle Laderman Ukeles wrote, “Maintenance is a drag; it takes all the f*cking time (lit.) The mind boggles and chafes at the boredom. The culture confers lousy status on maintenance jobs = minimum wages, housewives = no pay.” In Continuity Errors, moments of reflection are disrupted with splashes of levity, absurdity, and raunchiness that ask the reader to consider how labor and play make up our days."-- Provided by publisher

      Continuity Errors