This week’s @TheTLS, featuring T. H. Breen on the American Revolution; @ae_stallings on Edna St Vincent Millay; @agnesjuliet on the medical mistreatment of women; @JC_Scutts on love; @LamornaAsh on The Matrix; @judecook_ on twins – and more pic.twitter.com/Hs1LX6wMwV
— George Berridge (@George_Berridge) January 12, 2022
Category Archives: Literature
Preview: The New Yorker Magazine – January 17
Previews: Times Literary Supplement – January 7
Previews: The New Yorker Magazine – January 3, 2022
Previews: London Review Of Books – January 6, 2022
Previews: Times Literary Supplement – December 24
Previews: The New Yorker Magazine – December 27
Shakespeare & Company: Author Aysegul Savas On Her Book ‘White On White’
A “marvelous” (Lauren Groff) and “gentle, mysterious and profound” (Marina Abramović) novel about a woman who has come undone.
A student moves to the city to research Gothic nudes, renting an apartment from a painter, Agnes, who lives in another town with her husband. One day, Agnes arrives in the city and settles into the upstairs studio.
In their meetings on the stairs, in the studio, at the corner café, the kitchen at dawn, Agnes tells stories of her youth, her family, her marriage, and ideas for her art – which is always just about to be created. As the months pass, it becomes clear that Agnes might not have a place to return to. The student is increasingly aware of Agnes’s disintegration. Her stories are frenetic; her art scattered and unfinished, white paint on a white canvas.
What emerges is the menacing sense that every life is always at the edge of disaster, no matter its seeming stability. Alongside the research into human figures, the student is learning, from a cool distance, about the narrow divide between happiness and resentment, creativity and madness, contentment and chaos.
White on White is a sharp exploration of empathy and cruelty, and the stunning discovery of what it means to be truly vulnerable, and laid bare.