Popkey writes about these emotional eddies with such thrilling detachment you’ll wonder why you ever worried about love at all.” -Jenny Offill, author of Dept. “A pleasingly unsentimental novel about attraction and repulsion and the fluid line between the two. Its narrator is as skeptical of her own self-delusive fictions as she is of the stifling cliches and shallow fantasies about women's interior lives perpetuated by the wider culture." –Karen Russell, author of Orange World REVIEWSĪn intimate evisceration of our narrow imaginings of female sexuality, a brilliantly structured character study, and a book that repeatedly asks how women can fully trust their own desires when they've grown up steeped in the wrong stories. She has written for, among other outlets, The New Republic, The New Yorker's Page-Turner blog, the Paris Review Daily, The Hairpin, The Awl, GQ, and New York magazine's The Cut. She graduated with a BA in Humanities from Yale in 2009 and with an MFA in Creative Writing from Washington University in St. Miranda Popkey was born in Santa Cruz, California in 1987. Edgy, wry, shot through with rage and despair, Topics of Conversation introduces an audacious and immensely gifted new novelist. The novel is composed almost exclusively of conversations between women-the stories they tell each other, and the stories they tell themselves, about shame and love, infidelity and self-sabotage-and careens through twenty years in the life of an unnamed narrator hungry for experience and bent on upending her life. Miranda Popkey's first novel is about desire, disgust, motherhood, loneliness, art, pain, feminism, anger, envy, guilt-written in language that sizzles with intelligence and eroticism. For readers of Rachel Cusk, Lydia Davis, and Jenny Offill-a compact tour de force about sex, violence, and self-loathing from a ferociously talented new voice in fiction.
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