The Devil's Treasure
The Devil's Treasure
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Author(s): Gaitskill, Mary
ISBN No.: 9781946022820
Pages: 288
Year: 202308
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 24.84
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"Gaitskill is an era-defining talent, one of the best American fiction writers working today, and the book is a collage of fiction, autobiography, and fairy tale that seeks, through ''ordered disorder,'' to approach a fundamental thing about making art--one that defines Gaitskill''s oeuvre . Few people have written as well about broken, dystopian America, both urban and suburban . Her form of radical truth-telling recovers her characters'' shattered dignity. This mechanism--or mysticism, or alchemy--is the essence of art, and makes the best argument that we ought to place no limits on it." --Valerie Stivers, Compact Magazine "This superb book is for more than just super fans. Gaitskill speaks about the opposition inside us, the doubleness of human nature, and a longing for unity." --Michael Silverblatt, KCRW Bookworm "A challenging and affecting puzzle . In time, you come to see how everything melds together, how it all intersects .


Everything under consideration in this unique project is somehow beautiful, even when seemingly pained. The Devil''s Treasure is an absorbing exercise -- a chance to see deeply into Gaitskill''s world and, at the least, a fine introduction to her oeuvre . This is one book that deserves more readers." --Drew Hart, Arts Fuse "The medium of collage emerged to challenge the difference between the real and the artificial. Similarly, The Devil''s Treasure draws attention to the line--increasingly blurred--between fiction and nonfiction . Gaitskill, too, likes to peer into Hell, always with the utmost empathy." --Mia Levitin, Times Literary Supplement "Gaitskill''s unusual new project creates a collage out of her previous works, connected by the thread of a new short story. At the age of 7, Ginger goes to hell to steal the Devil''s treasure .


Ginger steals the sack of treasure only to discover that now she can never put it down; that the treasure has become a part of her; that it is something she needs but does not want and that the truth it speaks is about love and pain and how they will not be separated in this life or the one beyond . The book rewards those looking for a deeper connection to Gaitskill''s rigorous imagination." -- Kirkus Reviews "This is Gaitskill''s gift: showing the curiosity that cathartically persists at the abyss--of violence, of humiliation, of separation. That is, the interest in experience extant even in trauma . Strange and shifting, The Devil''s Treasure . [moves] toward the frisson of the fiction/nonfiction border . Gaitskill''s legendary style is narcotic, her fictions hallucinatory, as the real often is. Her clarion sentences of constellated imagery drop you into that ''deep, soft core that everyone longs for, too deep for games or even words'' .


The book''s fictive-critical hybridity is a call-and-response with the self: passages from novels are answered by elucidations of the origins of their writing." --Quinn Latimer, 4Columns "Gaitskill has produced a body of work so acutely observant of human behavior that it''s frequently described in the language of violation: a vivisection, a dental drill, a flogging . But the real danger is elsewhere: It''s in glances and gestures and sudden silences, in craving contact and being rebuffed . Gaitskill isn''t scary because she conjures monsters; monsters, she points out, are almost always in fashion. What makes her scary, and what makes her exciting, is her ability to evoke the hidden life, the life unseen, the life we don''t even know we are living." --Parul Sehgal, The New York Times Magazine "What is most amazing about Gaitskill is her ability to portray the heart of human longing and suffering, and to see in each gesture of our lives the disturbing and conflicting pool of drives that marks our every gesture." --Sheila Heti, The Believer "Gaitskill is something special. She doesn''t grandstand; she lacks self-pity.


She has an intuitive sympathy for people acting on their worst impulses and a gift for portraying cruelty without condemnation. She manages to be an erotic writer without being, precisely, a sex writer." --Emily Nussbaum, New York Magazine "About sex she is an especially distinctive writer. She catches cruelty and inexplicable desire, what she has called ''the dirt within,'' as well as any writer we have. Once you''ve read her, her little hammer continues to tap in your head." --Dwight Garner, The New York Times.


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