Hurry Along

$15.00

This is a novel which is difficult to describe because it’s told with flashbacks and fragments, as memories becoming abstracted, exploring new territories and new beauty.

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Description

This is a novel which is difficult to describe because of its complexity. Essentially, it tells the story of a family, but it’s told with flashbacks and fragments in such a way that a reader may easily get lost. Nonetheless, it’s a good sense of being lost, a sense in which one explores new territories and discovers new beauty.

“Poet and painter Plimpton’s fiction debut is a luscious non-narrative map of shifting emotional and physical landscapes born out of the quotidian lives of people, trees, animals, beaches, and more. Plimpton usually makes her way through the book via the eyes of individuals somehow intertwined, but just as suddenly as a world is crafted through Plimpton’s effortless prose, it shifts or disappears entirely. The novel’s vibrant, contoured world grants its every facet a degree of agency—from the effects of domesticity to the weather itself—rendering characters’ inner states via impression as opposed to exposition. What might become tedious in the hands of a less skilled writer is achieved by Plimpton with aplomb—because the book’s constituent elements are at once familiar and capable of unending transformation, the sensation of reading Plimpton’s prose is that of wandering vividly decorated corridors of imagination. Most rewarding is Plimpton’s refusal to inhibit her evolving creations; she allows them to develop perpetually, and then drop delicately away, like a flower’s petals, “fluttered” by the breeze that we feel, but cannot see.” -Publishers Weekly

 

Sarah Plimpton is a painter and a poet. She divides her time between New York City and France. Her poems and prose have appeared in The New York Review of Books, The Paris Review, and the Denver Quarterly, among other magazines. A collection of poems has been translated into French, L’Autre Soleil, and published by LeCormier, Belgium. Her paintings and artist’s books are in various museum collections including the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Metropolitan Museum, of Art.



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