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Permission
S. Chrostowska
€ 14.99
€ 14.74
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for Permission
Paperback. Num Pages: 201 pages, illustrations. BIC Classification: FA. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 216 x 140 x 39. Weight in Grams: 454.
Consisting of anonymous e-mail messages sent by the author to an acclaimed visual artist over the course of a year, "Permission" is the record of an experiment: an attempt to forge a connection with a stranger through the writing of a book. Part meditation, part narrative, part essay, it is presented to its addressee as a gift that asks for no thanks or acknowledgement--but what can be given in words, and what received? "Permission" not only updates the "epistolary novel" by embracing the permissiveness we associate with digital communication, it opens a new literary frontier.
Consisting of anonymous e-mail messages sent by the author to an acclaimed visual artist over the course of a year, "Permission" is the record of an experiment: an attempt to forge a connection with a stranger through the writing of a book. Part meditation, part narrative, part essay, it is presented to its addressee as a gift that asks for no thanks or acknowledgement--but what can be given in words, and what received? "Permission" not only updates the "epistolary novel" by embracing the permissiveness we associate with digital communication, it opens a new literary frontier.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2015
Publisher
Dalkey Archive Press United States
Number of pages
201
Condition
New
Number of Pages
201
Place of Publication
Normal, IL, United States
ISBN
9781564788580
SKU
V9781564788580
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About S. Chrostowska
S. D. Chrostowska is the author of Literature on Trial: The Emergence of Critical Discourse in Germany, Poland & Russia, 1700-1800. She is Assistant Professor of European Studies in the Department of Humanities at York University.
Reviews for Permission
S. D. Chrostowska achieves unexpected buoyancy in spite of the intensity of her material. Permission, certain to be among the most formally adventurous books published this year, will thrill readers of fearless stylists like Blanchot, Barthes, and Anne Carson. In its obsessive intricacy, it evokes even earlier forbears: those wonderfully melancholy European humanists, Thomas Browne and Robert Burton.'Every Library is a haunted cemetery,' writes F. Wren, the narrator of Permission. This fine and perplexing novel is itself something between a library and a cemetery, spinning around the hauntings of desire, the confusions of memory, the ambiguities of solitude and, above all, the mystery of writing.
Teju Cole One of the most intellectually bracing, technically fascinating Canadian-authored novels of the year.
Steven W. Beattie Quill & Quire I found [Permission] to be a complex, elusive, perplexing, and, at times, bold work that alternated between thrilling possibilities and frustrating gestures, but always a work that begged to be deeply pondered and reread.
Terry Pitts 3:AM
Teju Cole One of the most intellectually bracing, technically fascinating Canadian-authored novels of the year.
Steven W. Beattie Quill & Quire I found [Permission] to be a complex, elusive, perplexing, and, at times, bold work that alternated between thrilling possibilities and frustrating gestures, but always a work that begged to be deeply pondered and reread.
Terry Pitts 3:AM