SPRAWL

Danielle Dutton
4.08
258 ratings 43 reviews
Finalist for The Believer Book Award, 2010 “Danielle Dutton’s unnamed narrator stalks through yards, streets, and her own house with such sharp perception that everything she encounters—cake trays, the doorbell’s ring, a dead body—becomes an object in her vast and impeccable still-life. Dutton’s sentences are as taut and controlled as her narrator’s mind, and a hint at what compels both (‘I locate my body by grounding it against the bodies of others’) betrays a fierce and feral searching. SPRAWL makes suburban landscapes thrilling again.” —The Believer Book Award, Editors’ Shortlist “SPRAWL, first published in 2010, is a stream-of-consciousness collage of domesticity and intimacy, the unwavering assertion of a suburban woman’s individuality and selfhood that never loses its sense of humor.” —Lauren Kane, The Paris Review Staff’s Favorite Books of 2018 “A kind of Mrs. Dalloway in objects, a kind of performance piece melding stream-of-consciousness with commentary on photographer Laura Letinsky’s domestic still lifes, and at times one of the most philosophical accounts of contemporary suburban American existence and the ever-trenchant fetters of gender roles, Dutton’s SPRAWL is a book a reader might read in one sitting, but it will resonate for days to come—if not longer. . . . SPRAWL is that rare kind of book that will change one’s perception of what fiction can do.” —K. Thomas Khan, 3:AM Magazine
Genres: FictionPoetryLiterary FictionShort StoriesContemporaryNovelsLiteratureBook ClubCities
144 Pages

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5 star
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