Bellamy's debut novel revives the central female character from Bram
Stoker's Dracula and imagines her as an independent woman living in
San Francisco during the 1980s. Hypocrisy's not the problem, I think,
it's allegory the breeding ground of paranoia. The act of reading
into--how does one know when to stop? KK says that Dodie has the
advantage because she's physical and I'm "only psychic." ... The truth
is: everyone is adopted. My true mother wore a turtleneck and a long
braid down her back, drove a Karmann Ghia, drank Chianti in dark
corners, fucked Gregroy Corso ... --Dodie Bellamy, The Letters of Mina
Harker First published in 1998, Dodie Bellamy's debut novel The
Letters of Mina Harker sought to resuscitate the central female
character from Bram Stoker's Dracula and reimagine her as an
independent woman living in San Francisco during the 1980s--a woman
not unlike Dodie Bellamy. Harker confesses the most intimate details
of her relationships with four different men in a series of letters.
Vampirizing Mina Harker, Bellamy turns the novel into a laboratory: a
series of attempted transmutations between the two women in which the
real story occurs in the gaps and the slippages. Lampooning the
intellectual theory-speak of that era, Bellamy's narrator fights to
inhabit her own sexuality despite feelings of vulnerability and
destruction. Stylish but ruthlessly unpretentious, The Letters of Mina
Harker was Bellamy's first major claim to the literary space she would
come to inhabit.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781635901603
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Random House Publishing Services
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter