Somebody with a Little Hammer: Essays
Engaging, unusual essays written over the last two decades on matters literary, social, cultural, and personal—from the explosive date-rape debates of the ’90s to the ubiquitous political adultery of the ’00s, from Anton Chekhov to Celine Dion.
 
Here is Mary Gaitskill the essayist: witty, direct, penetrating to the core of each issue, personality, or literary trope (On Updike: “It’s as if [he] has entered a tiny window marked ‘Rabbit,’ and, by some inverse law, passed into a universe of energies both light and dark, expanded and contracted, infinite and workaday.” On Elizabeth Wurtzel: “If this kooky, foot-stamping, self-loathing screed is meant to be, as it claims, a defense of ‘difficult women,’ i.e., women who ‘write their own operating manuals’ . . . all I can say is, bitches best duck and run for cover.”) Gaitskill writes about the ridiculous and poetic ambition of Norman Mailer, about the sociosexual cataclysm embodied by porn star Linda Lovelace, and, in the deceptively titled “Lost Cat,” about how power and race can warp the most innocent and intimate of relationships. Appearing in chronological order, the essays offer Gaitskill's thoughts and reactions, always with the same heat-seeking, revelatory understanding that we have long valued in her fiction.
1300479155
Somebody with a Little Hammer: Essays
Engaging, unusual essays written over the last two decades on matters literary, social, cultural, and personal—from the explosive date-rape debates of the ’90s to the ubiquitous political adultery of the ’00s, from Anton Chekhov to Celine Dion.
 
Here is Mary Gaitskill the essayist: witty, direct, penetrating to the core of each issue, personality, or literary trope (On Updike: “It’s as if [he] has entered a tiny window marked ‘Rabbit,’ and, by some inverse law, passed into a universe of energies both light and dark, expanded and contracted, infinite and workaday.” On Elizabeth Wurtzel: “If this kooky, foot-stamping, self-loathing screed is meant to be, as it claims, a defense of ‘difficult women,’ i.e., women who ‘write their own operating manuals’ . . . all I can say is, bitches best duck and run for cover.”) Gaitskill writes about the ridiculous and poetic ambition of Norman Mailer, about the sociosexual cataclysm embodied by porn star Linda Lovelace, and, in the deceptively titled “Lost Cat,” about how power and race can warp the most innocent and intimate of relationships. Appearing in chronological order, the essays offer Gaitskill's thoughts and reactions, always with the same heat-seeking, revelatory understanding that we have long valued in her fiction.
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Somebody with a Little Hammer: Essays

Somebody with a Little Hammer: Essays

by Mary Gaitskill
Somebody with a Little Hammer: Essays
Somebody with a Little Hammer: Essays

Somebody with a Little Hammer: Essays

by Mary Gaitskill

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Overview

Engaging, unusual essays written over the last two decades on matters literary, social, cultural, and personal—from the explosive date-rape debates of the ’90s to the ubiquitous political adultery of the ’00s, from Anton Chekhov to Celine Dion.
 
Here is Mary Gaitskill the essayist: witty, direct, penetrating to the core of each issue, personality, or literary trope (On Updike: “It’s as if [he] has entered a tiny window marked ‘Rabbit,’ and, by some inverse law, passed into a universe of energies both light and dark, expanded and contracted, infinite and workaday.” On Elizabeth Wurtzel: “If this kooky, foot-stamping, self-loathing screed is meant to be, as it claims, a defense of ‘difficult women,’ i.e., women who ‘write their own operating manuals’ . . . all I can say is, bitches best duck and run for cover.”) Gaitskill writes about the ridiculous and poetic ambition of Norman Mailer, about the sociosexual cataclysm embodied by porn star Linda Lovelace, and, in the deceptively titled “Lost Cat,” about how power and race can warp the most innocent and intimate of relationships. Appearing in chronological order, the essays offer Gaitskill's thoughts and reactions, always with the same heat-seeking, revelatory understanding that we have long valued in her fiction.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307378224
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication date: 04/04/2017
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 5.70(w) x 8.50(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

About The Author
MARY GAITSKILL is the author of the story collections Bad Behavior, Because They Wanted To (nominated for the PEN/Faulkner Award), and Don’t Cry, and the novels The Mare, Veronica (nominated for the National Book Award), and Two Girls, Fat and Thin. She has received a Guggenheim Fellowship, and her stories and essays have appeared in The New Yorker, Harper’s, ArtForum, and Esquire, among many other journals, as well as The Best American Short Stories (1993) and The O. Henry Prize Stories (1998).

Hometown:

New York, New York

Date of Birth:

November 11, 1954

Place of Birth:

Lexington, Kentucky

Education:

B.A., University of Michigan, 1980

Table of Contents

A Lot of Exploding Heads
On Reading the Book of Revelation 3

The Trouble with Following the Rules
On “Date Rape,” “Victim Culture,” and Personal Responsibility 10

A Lovely Chaotic Silliness
A Review of The Fermata by Nicholson Baker 27

Toes ’n Hose
A Review of From the Tip of the Toes to the Top of the Hose by Elmer Batters, and Nothing But the Girl, edited by Susie Bright and Jill Posener 30

Crackpot Mystic Spirit
A Review of Invisible Republic: Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes by Greil Marcus 33

Bitch
A Review of Bitch: In Praise of Difficult Women by Elizabeth Wurtzel 36

Dye Hard
A Review of Blonde by Joyce Carol Oates 41

Mechanical Rabbit
A Review of Licks of Love by John Updike 46

I’ve Seen It All
Thoughts on a Song by Björk 53

And It Would Not Be Wonderful to Meet a Megalosaurus
On Bleak House by Charles Dickens 58

Remain in Light
On the Talking Heads 71

Victims and Losers: A Love Story
Thoughts on the Movie Secretary 76

The Bridge
A Memoir of Saint Petersburg 85

Somebody with a Little Hammer
On Teaching “Gooseberries” by Anton Chekhov 105

Enchantment and Cruelty
On Peter Pan by J. M. Barrie 111

Worshipping the Overcoat
An Election Diary 114

This Doughty Nose
On Norman Mailer’s An American Dream and The Armies of the Night 120

Lost Cat
A Memoir 131

I See Their Hollowness
A Review of Cockroach by Rawi Hage 180

Lives of the Hags
A Review of Baba Yaga Laid an Egg by Dubravka Ugresic 185

Leave the Woman Alone!
On the Never-Ending Political Extramarital Scandals 191

Master’s Mind
A Review of Agaat by Marlene van Niekerk 199

Imaginary Light
A Song Called “Nowhere Girl” 205

Form over Feeling
A Review of Out by Natsuo Kirino 210

Beg for Your Life
On the Films of Laurel Nakadate 215

The Cunning of Women
On One Thousand and One Nights by Hanan al-Shaykh 222

Pictures of Lo
On Covering Lolita 229

The Easiest Thing to Forget
On Carl Wilson’s Let’s Talk About Love 235

She’s Supposed to Make You Sick
A Review of Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn 241

Icon
On Linda Lovelace 248

That Running Shadow of Your Voice
On Nabokov’s Letters to Véra 261

Acknowledgments 271

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