Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Alice Carrière"


3 mentions found


What books are on your night stand? “Everything/Nothing/Someone” by Alice Carrière, “Everything’s Fine” by Cecilia Rabess, “The Drama of the Gifted Child” by Alice Miller, “Small Things Like These” by Claire Keegan, “Severance” by Ling Ma, “The Future” by Naomi Alderman. What books are you embarrassed to admit you’ve never read? I’m all about emotion and beauty of the language over intellect. I want to weep, not take notes.
Persons: Alice Carrière, Cecilia Rabess, Alice Miller, , Claire Keegan, “ Severance, Ling Ma, Naomi Alderman, What’s, Sting ”, Paul Murray, Read, you’ve, , Ulysses
Carrière’s mother, Jennifer Bartlett (1941-2022), was an American conceptual artist renowned for her “massive canvases” that moved from mathematical abstraction into realism. In 1983, she married the author’s father, Mathieu Carrière, a German intellectual, activist and actor whose first starring role was in “Young Törless,” directed by Volker Schlöndorff. Even before her parents’ divorce, when she was 6, Carrière grew up shuttling back and forth between a 17,000-square-foot townhouse in New York City’s West Village and a penthouse in Paris, according to her parents’ work and social schedules. “It was hard to know what was true in my house,” she writes. “I had taken something of my father’s into me, something intimate — his liquids and his lonely need,” she writes.
Persons: Alice Carrière Alice Carrière’s, Jennifer Bartlett, Bartlett, , Mathieu Carrière, “ Young, Volker Schlöndorff, Carrière, Organizations: New Locations: American, New York City, German, , New York, Paris
NOTHING SPECIAL, by Nicole FlatteryIn the Irish writer Nicole Flattery’s exquisitely disorienting debut novel, “Nothing Special,” Mae, the daughter of an alcoholic waitress, spends her youth in 1960s New York City riding up and down department store escalators, getting nowhere except deeper into her own dissatisfaction. What she does do is observe, and the one thing that is clear is the rapacity of her speculation. She subjects her world and the people who populate it to a ravenous metamorphosing, a proxy for the closeness she craves and fears. As she listens, she grows closer to the disembodied voices, and to the revealing silences in between, than to anyone else around her. “It felt like my life had been reduced to nothing but the tapes, that I no longer recognized the sound of my own voice,” Mae narrates.
Persons: Nicole, Nicole Flattery’s, ” Mae, , Mae, , , Andy Warhol’s, she’s Locations: New York City
Total: 3