Beschreibung
Longlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction 2013
Sheila's twenties were going to plan.
She got married. She hosted parties. A theatre asked her to write a play.
Then she realised that she didn't know how to write a play. That her favourite part of the party was cleaning up after the party. And that her marriage made her feel like she was banging into a brick wall.
So Sheila abandons her marriage and her play, befriends Margaux, a free and untortured painter, and begins sleeping with the dominating Israel, who's a genius at sex but not at art. She throws herself into recording them and everyone around her, investigating how they live, desperate to know, as she wanders,How Should a Person Be?
Using transcripts, real emails, plus heavy doses of fiction, Heti crafts an exciting, courageous, and mordantly funny tour through one woman's heart and mind.
Autorenportrait
Sheila Heti is the author of several books of fiction, includingThe Middle StoriesandTicknor, and a book of "conversational philosophy" calledThe Chairs Are Where the People Go, written with Misha Glouberman, which was chosen byThe New Yorkeras a best book of 2011. Her writing has appeared inThe New York Times,Bookforum,McSweeney's,n+1,The Guardian, and other places. She lives in Toronto.
Schlagzeile
A raw, startling, genre-defying novel of friendship, sex, and love in the new millennium. Perfect for fans of Jennifer Egan, Joan Didion, Melissa Banks, and Leanne Shapton.
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