『I Was Bonnie and Clyde (with Special Guest Laura Kasischke)』のカバーアート

I Was Bonnie and Clyde (with Special Guest Laura Kasischke)

I Was Bonnie and Clyde (with Special Guest Laura Kasischke)

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概要

Laura Kasischke joins the queens to talk about her new collection of poems (and her new novel)!


Support Breaking Form by reviewing the show on Apple Podcasts here.

Aaron's STOP LYING is available from the Pitt Poetry Series. BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE is available from Bridwell Press. James's ROMANTIC COMEDY is available from Four Way Books.


Notes:

"The Crying Towel" was first published in The Massachusetts Review Volume 57, Issue 4

Read a short essay Kasischke wrote about the beginning of her poem "The First Resurrection"

Uma Thurman starred in The Life Before Her Eyes (2007), adapted from Kasischke's novel of the same name. Evan Rachel Wood plays the younger version of the Uma Thurman character. Her other novels adapted for film include White Bird in a Blizzard (2014), directed by Gregg Araki and starring Shailene Woodley and Suspicious River (2000), directed by Lynne Stopkewich and starring Molly Parker. Kasischke also co-wrote the screenplay for this dark thriller.

Laura Kasischke's novel The Lifeguard is available from Red Hen Press here, Read an interview about the novel here.

Alberto Giacometti "Woman with Her Throat Cut (Femme égorgée)" serves as the ekphrastic inspiration for Kasischke's poem of the same name. View the artwork here. Giacometti completed the sculpture in 1932 and used bronze cast. Dimensions are 22.00 x 87.50 x 53.50 cm (or roughly 8.5 x 34.5 x 21 inches). Lucy Flint writes that the human figure is treated brutally in Giacometti's piece, and the woman appears in insectlike form. Woman with Her Throat Cut "is a particularly vicious image: the body is splayed open, disemboweled, arched in a paroxysm of sex and death. The psychological torment and the sadistic misogyny projected by this sculpture are in startling contrast to the serenity of other contemporaneous pieces by Giacometti, such as Woman Walking." (article on the Guggenheim site).

Watch Kasischke give a reading here, here, and here.

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