Screen Tests
by Kate Zambreno
Buy on AmazonIn the first half of Kate Zambreno's astoundingly original collection, the narrator regales us with incisive and witty swatches from a life lived inside a brilliant mind, meditating on aging and vanity, fame and failure, writing and writers, along with portraits of everyone from Susan Sontag to Amal Clooney, Maurice Blanchot to Louise Brooks. The series of essays that follow, on figures central to Zambreno's thinking, including Kathy Acker, David Wojnarowicz, and Barbara Loden, are manifestoes about art, that ingeniously intersect and chime with the stories that came before them.
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"This isn’t, strictly, a novel, but I’d like to argue for a wider definition of the novel in the English-speaking and English-reading world. In other countries, a novel is often just thought of as any book that isn’t trying to pass itself off as a fact. Story collections, as we call them, enjoy a second-class citizenry for no good reason. I think this is a mistake. For this and many other reasons, I’m recommending Screen Tests as a counterfactual novel because it is a collection of writing written from a consistent point of view, that of Zambreno, as a character, in a certain mood. No, it’s not a novel with a single plot threading through the stories, but it is a novel if you can accept a single line of thought as no more or less valid than a plot. It’s a perfect book. One night some years ago I woke up at two in the morning in a very unusual moment of insomnia, and I went downstairs like a child on Christmas and I pulled this book from my shelf and I read the whole thing over the course of a few hours then I went back to bed. Best case of insomnia of all time."
The Best Counterfactual Novels · fivebooks.com