desertcart
Explore

CHF22

Price includes

Import Duties and Taxes. Free shipping available

From Liechtenstein

You Are Free: Stories

0 ratings
Product ID: 40599529
Brand:
danzy senna
1
Add to cartCHF22
Spotted a better price elsewhere? Self ship it at cheapest rate!
Learn more

Easy Returns with desertcart PRO

30 day return window

Free replacements & exchanges

Hassle free one-click returns

Customer support

We’re available 24/7 to help you!

About the item

    undefined
.com Review ----------- Author Q&A with Danzy Senna ( http://www..com/Danzy-Senna/e/B000APTHUE ) Q: Motherhood is the prominent theme of most stories in your new collection You Are Free. Whether as a condition or a defining characteristic of identity, most of the characters in your collection are wrestling with motherhood. Did you set out to write about motherhood or did the theme arise ally? A: It definitely arose ally. I didn’t write these stories during one extended period of time, but they do all grapple with questions maybe not so much of motherhood, but of nurturing – of the self, of a child, of an animal. I think for a woman artist, the worry is often that when you have children, you stop being an artist. But for me, motherhood – hard as it has been to find those hours to write – really gave me a kind of refresher course on humanity. It made me think about all these familiar subjects in fresh ways: identity confusion, grief, jealousy, class anxiety, loneliness – and of course the desire in all of us to be transformed by an experience, whether we succeed or not. Q: How much does your own life experience determine your writing themes? For example, do you find yourself exploring themes like motherhood more now that you are a mother yourself? A: Half of the stories were written when I was single and childless, living in New York. Half of them were written during my pregnancies and the births of my two sons in Los Angeles. As a result, perhaps, some of the women characters are single and childless, “free” but longing for something to ground them, and some of the characters are married and in the process of becoming mothers. This split in the book reflects the split in me as I was writing it between the young single self and the older mother self. I was interested in the effect motherhood had on my other identities – as a sister, as a daughter, as a friend – and how the ways I’d thought of myself in terms of race, sex and class were also profoundly affected. Q: The protagonist in each of the stories in You Are Free is a woman. Was that intentional? A: No. It wasn’t intentional. But I’ve had an interest for a long time in the state of women of my age group – especially at this moment in history, when we are supposed to be liberated and have all these choices open to us that weren’t open to our mothers. What does that really mean? Q: The title story, You Are Free, focuses on the central dichotomy running throughout the book: women who are mothers and those who are not. In that story, it seems that both women are free in different ways. Do you think the timing of when the story was written in terms of your own life defines which side of the coin seems most “free” in a given piece or do you still see both sides? A: I still see both sides. I was single and childless a lot longer than I have been married and a mother, so I definitely feel identified with each of the women in these stories, no matter what their predicament. The meaning of “freedom” in this collection is, I hope, as ambiguous as I intended it to be. Ironically, in the title story, the phrase, “You are free,” is taken from a line spoken by the female protagonist who has just had an . “You are free, you are free, you are free,” she chants in her head on the way home from the clinic. Is she referring to herself or the fetus she has just aborted? And in an odd way, that dead fetus is the only character in this collection that is truly “free.” Once we are born, we are encumbered by “identity” – by the projections of the world. Our bodies – the meanings they speak to the world – will always be encumbered. So then how do we make choices? Where, if anywhere, do we feel free? And free from what? Q: The cover of You Are Free is very striking. Who is the artist and what is your relationship to her? A: The image on the cover of this book is by one of my favorite artists, Lorna Simpson. I don’t know Ms. Simpson personally, but have always been a huge admirer of her work. She deals specifically with issues of identity – the issue of the male gaze, the white gaze, and history’s relationship to the present. I especially loved this series of drawings of women – the same woman? – wearing different hair styles. It looks almost like a wig advertisement from the 1950s. I love the way the women are turned away, half-concealed by the wig, half-revealed. It speaks beautifully to the themes in my work of both the permanence and mutability of identity. Q: You Are Free is your first collection of short stories. After writing two novels and a memoir, why did you decide now was the time to try your hand at the short story form? How was the writing process similar or different from your other books? A: I have always loved to read the short story form – have admired it from afar – but considered myself primarily a novelist. But slowly, over the years, short stories have come to me – snippets in the life of a character that only required twenty or thirty pages, sometimes less. They are in some ways more like writing poems – every word and line counts, there is a push toward economy. You have to ask yourself why you have entered the character’s life on this particular day and not stray too far from that focus. In a novel, there is more room for messiness and tangents and sprawl. Now that I’ve started writing short stories, I find them so pleasurable that I’m sure I will continue to do so between and through the novel writing process. Q: Race is a consistent theme in your work, but less directly in You Are Free than in your other books. Is that because you see motherhood as a more universal subject or are there other reasons race was not the focus of this collection? A: I never consciously think about what issues I’m going to explore in a work of fiction. It just ally develops out of the characters I’m writing. I see race entering these characters lives the way it enters many of our lives right now. It is there, an unspoken presence, but sometimes it seems not to matter at all and sometimes it seems like everything revolves around it. Some of the characters in the stories are not definable racially and others I left their race completely unstated. I liked leaving it a little mysterious and seeing how that affected the way the story could be read. I think in these stories race is just one of many different identities that the women are struggling to understand – but it is certainly not the whole picture. It probably has to do with how race functions in my life at this time – something I think about but don’t feel obsessed by anymore. Photo of Danzy Senna © Percival Everett Read more ( javascript:void(0) ) Review ------ "There's not much I can think of that would make me want to extend my hour-long commute ... but that's what Danzy Senna's new book You are Free did. ... Maybe it's the humanity that Senna infuses into each of her characters. Whatever "it" is would be a great topic for any book club discussion." -Ladies' Home Journal "Skillfully exposes the cracks in her characters' domestic lives...Though Senna's stories address race, class, and gender, they never devolve into simple case studies. Rather, her collection offers nuanced portraits of characters confronting anxieties and prejudices leaving them not as free as they would like to be." -The New York Times Book Review "Crisply written stories [that] take place in a middle-class world we thought we knew, while revealing the strangeness, distress, and sorrow under its blank surfaces. As with Senna's novels, racial issues crop up, but here they dodge and feint through women's lives that are never as well-tended as they seem." -The Village Voice "Daring...this risk taking author tackles her greatest creative challenge so far...In eight lyrical stories, Senna gives us messy mothers and daughters struggling with issues of race, identity, and finding and defining one's truth." -Essence "Senna reveals things about people that we rarely see in day-to-day life. ...Severing readers from their entrenched moralities usually takes a lot longer (at least a novel), but [she] does it in a few carefully chosen details." -The Los Angeles Times "Danzy Senna trains her gimlet eye on the intersection of race and family life, and the result is a richly nuanced, often funny, always provocative work of art." -Jennifer Egan "Danzy Senna's probing and marvelous stories delve into the deepest layers of the human heart and psyche, all while showing us a multi-colored, multi- flavored, and most importantly multi-layered world to which we all--lovers, mothers, nomads, strangers--could easily belong." -Edwidge Danticat "Danzy Senna's stories are beautiful examples of deceptive simplicity, which of course isn't simplicity at all. The tales are seductive, lucid dispatches from contemporary life, but the undercurrents are electric and strange, and go on working changes on you after the book is closed." -Jonathan Lethem "Searingly smart and profoundly satisfying ... These women and men are palpable and so well wrought that one loses the sense that one is reading a book." -Richard Bausch "One hell of a book." -Victor LaValle Read more ( javascript:void(0) ) About the Author ---------------- Danzy Senna's first novel, Caucasia, was the winner of the Book-of-the-Month Club's Stephen Crane Award for First Fiction and an American Library Association Alex Award. It was a finalist for an International IMPAC Dublin Award, and was a Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year. Her short fiction and essays have been widely anthologized. She is a recipient of the 2002 Whiting Writers' Award and currently holds the Jenks Chair of Contemporary American/Letters at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts. Read more ( javascript:void(0) )
Disclaimer: The price shown above includes all applicable taxes and fees. The information provided above is for reference purposes only. Products may go out of stock and delivery estimates may change at any time. desertcart does not validate any claims made in the product descriptions above. For additional information, please contact the manufacturer or desertcart customer service. While desertcart makes reasonable efforts to only show products available in your country, some items may be cancelled if they are prohibited for import in United Arab Emirates. For more details, please visit our Support Page.

Frequently Asked Questions About You Are Free: Stories in Liechtenstein

Where can I buy You Are Free: Stories online at the best price in the Liechtenstein?

desertcart is the best online shopping platform where you can buy You Are Free: Stories from renowned brand(s). desertcart delivers the most unique and largest selection of products from across the world especially from the US, UK and India at best prices and the fastest delivery time.

Is You Are Free: Stories available and ready for delivery in Liechtenstein?

desertcart ships the You Are Free: Stories to Vaduz, Schaan, Eschen, Mauren, Triesenbergand more cities in Liechtenstein. Get unlimited free shipping in 164+ countries with desertcart Plus membership. We can deliver the You Are Free: Stories speedily without the hassle of shipping, customs or duties.

Does desertcart have 100% authentic You Are Free: Stories online?

desertcart buys You Are Free: Stories directly from the authorized agents and verifies the authenticity of all the products. We have a dedicated team who specialize in quality control and efficient delivery. We also provide a free 14 days return policy along with 24/7 customer support experience.

Is it safe to buy You Are Free: Stories on desertcart?

Yes, it is absolutely safe to buy You Are Free: Stories from desertcart, which is a 100% legitimate site operating in 164 countries. Since 2014, desertcart has been delivering a wide range of products to customers and fulfilling their desires. You will find several positive reviews by desertcart customers on portals like Trustpilot, etc. The website uses an HTTPS system to safeguard all customers and protect financial details and transactions done online. The company uses the latest upgraded technologies and software systems to ensure a fair and safe shopping experience for all customers. Your details are highly secure and guarded by the company using encryption and other latest softwares and technologies.