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@emilybooks

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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On the deepest level in my gut, I knew she was not coming. How could she come? It was ridiculous. Idealistic. Flighty. Fantasy. But sheād told me sheād gotten a driver, and she would leave the city around ten a.m. I had to take her at her word. Though Iād possibly be cooler, more authentic, if I didnāt scrub the toilet and change my books around so the obscure ones would show.
Chloe Caldwell, āHungry Ghostā from Iāll Tell You In Person
These ten titles are on our must-read list this season.
You can almost hear Chloe Caldwellās voice when you read these essays (CoffeeHouse & Emily Books, out October 4)āher warm, earnest tone as she describes her love for Lena Dunham, ill-fated relationship with an older man, problems with heroin and acne, and working in a jewelry shop on Bleecker Street. As Caldwell relates her memories and struggles, misadventures and successes, readers will sympathize and see themselves in the vulnerable and flawed, yet ultimately charming narrator.
Have you read Iāll Tell You In Person yet? Get it here!
Everything I wanted and tons of opportunities were in front of my face, but I didnāt understand how to take them. On Gchat I told my dad I was having a hard time, and he said, Anywhere is a prison if you let it be.
Chloe Caldwell,Ā āBerlin 2009ā³ from Iāll Tell You In Person
October is an exciting ā dare we even say crisp and bountiful ā month for publishing. This is reflected in our must-read list, which is full of hotly-anticipated memoirs, novels and nonfiction, froā¦
Iāll Tell You In Person made Flavorwireās Books to Read This October list!
Itās focused on twentysomething misbehavior, and at early moments felt like a romp through consequence-free white privilege. Yet the cumulative effect snuck up on me, and eventually won me over entirely. From drugs, eating issues and nights of pranks and partying, the book builds and evolves into something more, a poignant exploration of leaving youth behind and finding the things ā and most importantly, the people ā that will make you content as an adult, including perspective on your memories and mistakes.
Are you ready to read it?

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
I got a pedicure each time I promised myself Iād stop doing heroināwhich is to say, I got pedicures that whole summer. Pedicures gave me the false notion I was about to get my shit together. I wasnāt functioning wellāmy brain cells were spent, and my serotonin was depleted. Sitting despondent in a vinyl chair was as good as it got.
Chloe Caldwell,Ā āSoul Killerā from Iāll Tell You In Person
In the valedictory essay of her new collection, I'll Tell You in Person, Chloe Caldwell recounts a trip to Berlin during which she attends a street rally. She's proud to have punctuated her otherwise aimless stay with meaning, only to realize she's unclear as to the protest's cause.
If this isn't an encapsulation of twentysomething meandering, I don't know what is. Caldwell's reputation as a chronicler of just that experience gets another nudge from her new book ā this following an earlier glittery essay collection,Legs Get Led Astray, and an autobiographical novella, praised by Lena Dunham, about falling in love with a woman. I'll Tell You reads like a coda to her years spent bouncing from city to city, job to job, and BFF to BFF. "I was always aware that this time would prove fleeting, and felt I had to try different things," Caldwell, who turned thirty this year, tells the Voice. "Eventually I decided to build a life because I didn't have anything. I didn't have a lamp."
You can get Iāll Tell You In Person here.Ā
The liberating thing about publishing an essay collection before you are a fully formed person is that there is nothing to fear. You have no readers. No experience. No memories of doing it before. No wounds. The bad thing about publishing an essay collection at twenty-five, when the frontal lobe has barely finished developing, is there is nothing to fear. No readers. No experience. No memories of doing it before. No wounds.
Chloe Caldwell,Ā āIn Real Lifeā from Iāll Tell You In Person
JUST BEFORE CHRISTMAS a couple of years ago, I made plans with a person whom I deeply admire. I wonāt say who but Iāll say this: sheās somewhere on the spectrum between Eileen Myles and BeyoncĆ©. You probably admire her tooāor you might hate her and think sheās fat. Regardless, she is a Celebrity with a capital C.
Chloe Caldwell, āHungry Ghostā from Iāll Tell You In PersonĀ
Chloe Caldwell once clogged Cheryl Strayedās toilet. She also untangled Naomi Wolfās jewelry.
"Chloe Caldwell is a force. A quirky writer who shares personal details of her life and describes them in a way that never feels like TMI, itās the opposite. You want more, the result of a trustworthy narrator and a skilled storyteller."
Get Iāll Tell You In PersonĀ today!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
I didnāt know what to do when men gave me flowers. I would always think, Great, now I will have to watch these things die.
ā Jade Sharma, from Problems
I was like, āHere are all my scars. Iāll tell you my secrets as you die of boredom. Here are the answers to questions you never cared enough to ask.ā I lifted up my shirt and said, āPlease love me.ā I lifted up my skirt and said, āPlease donāt leave yet.ā
Jade Sharma, from Problems (via lifeinpoetry)
Jade Sharmaās Problems Are Other People. Also Heroin.
The debut novel from Jade Sharma represents an uncanny work of redemption
āBy the final third of Jade Sharmaās first novel Problems, Maya has lost her barely-there bookstore job, her husband Peter, her lover Ogden, and whatever control she had over her heroin habit.ā
Read the full review on Electric Literature.
SNP! SNP! SNP.
It's finally here!!
https://www.emilybooks.com/books/problems/

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
My Own Private Radical Poetics (Birthday Manifesto)
Today Iām listening to Beyonceās Lemonade (What is it about your face that I canāt erase) + somewhere, too, in mind, I have on repeat that oft-quoted DFW line:
āEverything I ever let go of has claw marks on it"Ā Ā
Also today, all week, Iām channeling Robin Coste Lewis, who I was lucky to meet last month at an Emerging Writerās Festival, where we were both guests:
āIām not going to think about it!ā
Itās a strategy: Hereās some shit! AND THEN: Iām not going to think about it!
A strategy of the well-adjusted, a healthy strategy. Self-care.
Robin and I were speaking of stress, difficult things, lightly but still, and one of the banal difficult things that came up in this catalogue of mutual whinging was travel-stress. Robin just won the National Book Award for her stunning Voyage of the Sable Venus, and is traveling constantly; she said sheād have to take a small plane from Detroit to Chicago and how she hates small planes. There was a moment where that seemed to bother her, the idea lingered, but then she declared, āIām not going to think about it!ā
I keep hearing her words, that line: a clarion call, a reminder, a way to counter those claws: Iām not going to think about it. Today, for example, Iām not going to think about: my ex-husband, and all of the rude things he has been saying to me lately, which I didnāt think anyone was allowed to say anymore, but so it goes. Iām not going to think about it!
Iām not going to think about the latest academic-scholar-poet he has been involved with since oh maybe 5 minutes after we ended our marriage, and yet not 5 minutes before Iād found a place to live and also not 5 minutes before weād figured out how to actually, in fact, disentangle and divorce &etc.
Iām not going to think about it! Iām not going to think about his latest academic-poet girlfriend! Iām also not going to think about the review she wrote, which all of our mutual friends (because of course she is within the same community he and I have shared for many years) shared on my FB and Twitter and etc in which she wrote, however formally, a review extolling his viscerally-impactful radical poetry. Iām not going to think about how she made sure to note that his poetry will, dear reader, rearrange your limbs. (My limbs are still in recovery, after all.) Not going to think about her limbs!
I will say: the poets who love my ex-husband are very good at embodying the grotesquerie of his radical poetics.
Iām also not going to think about how this latest review echoes his earlier affair, the one that helped to end our marriage, which was already ending or over but still ā Iām not going to think about that affair with that poet, who began their affair with a not-review of his latest book, describing how sheād read his book in her bed, and, of his book, she noted:
It knew what I wanted and gave it to me
Iām not going to think about that either.
Because of course, dear reader, I am, if nothing else, an unreliable narrator, and all of these things Iām NOT THINKING ABOUT are merely one side of the story. Yes, of course, Iāve had my funāthough it didnāt involve writing reviews of grotesque poetsāand we all pay a price in the end. I believe in the multiplicity of truth, the impossibility of truth, the construction of self and narrative.
I also believe in Cher.
So Iām not going to think about the price!
Iām also not going to think about paying my lawyer or my rent or the sorry state of academiaāIām not going to think about my contingent non-tenure track jobs or ā
Hereās what I am going to think about: the books I read in bed these past weeks when Iām insomniac, high on Nardil and the June light, as Jane Kenyon put it:Ā Ā Robinsā Sable Venus and Ferrateās Lost Daughter and Olivia Laingās The Lonely City and Kate Zambrenoās The Book of Mutter (just last night! I was in tears); also that line by Eileen Myles, something she tweeted, a reminder (as CHER herself might say) there is love after love! or was it: EVERY LOVE SAVES ME FROM THE LAST LOVE - so why should I find myself so afflicted? I donāt! This is the human condition. We live we love we lose ad infinitum. I believe in love after love. I wrote that. I mean that.
There is only loss in this life, after all. But there is always loveāit never ends, even after death, even after divorce, which is death, but worse (I sometimes think).
Hereās what I will think about: ART. For example, last week, I happened to find out just in time that one of my all time favorites, SOPHIE CALLE, was in Chicago, speaking at the Art Institute. And so after class I trekked through the madness of downtown, through rainy Draft Town (something to do with NFL football) and found my place in a line spanning the block to be seated in the audience for Calleās lecture. My friend, the brilliant Lin Hixson, offered a poetic introduction for Calle, spoke of Calleās work as the artful composition of self, her concern for the multiplicity of truth. Calle took the stageāI adored her dress (of course)āand began toĀ Ā discuss her work with her charming accent and wry humorā she spoke of her art of following people randomly, how this began and how she wasnāt even an artist, she was just obsessed. She spoke of creating, of building an āartificial obsessionā, taking the job as a chambermaid; she spoke of the way boredom and banality is part of her work. Someone asked if she had a ādiscourseā around surveillance and stalkingā and she said āNo. I have no discourseā. It was funny. She was funny. She said later that she does not find this work funny while she is creating it, however. She spoke of āthe fabrication of non-reciprocityā and how the day she stopped following the man (sheād followed him to Venice, and called 100 hotels to find where he was staying). She said that part of her project is that she can control the emotion, while she is obsessed or stalking someone. That in life, of course, it is much harder to control emotion.
She only briefly showed her project with taxidermy, which I remember seeing at MOMA in the 90s with my boyfriend. I loved him so much. But I loved Sohie Calle more. And her work, even then, even in my inability to articulate why, rang cherries. And that occurred to me last week, tooāCalle discussed how after the email from the man breaking up with her, the one that led to her famous TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF project, she quickly became much more excited about her project then about the loss itself, which had been intensely painful. And she said she was so happy to be involved in the project that before long she was afraid he would ask to get back together (he didnāt).
And that was such a relief to hear. I really feel that my work has simply flourished, felt more urgent and true and alive in the past years, as my marriage has disintegrated, and though I didnāt want my marriage to fall apartāno one wants thatāI also know that there is truth and consolation in making art, in doing the work that you have to doāit is a gift, as Lin herself reminded me last summer, āThatās a gift,ā she said, to be able to write your way through this or within this, or around this, or beyond it. To be able to make the work that you have to make. And to spend a day at work, to talk about art all day, to end the day with Sophie Calleās inspiration lighting you on fire from within, to come home and to stay up too late working on your own projects, this book, this one you have to write now, the one youāve been thinking about it for a yearāand god thank god for that. Grace, some would call it.
(My ex and I walk back and forth on Grace these days, taking our son from his place to my place, the street is Grace, here in Chicago, and that doesnāt seem to be totally by chance.)
Someone asked Calle how the man who wrote the email felt about the project, and she said that he didnāt like it but he respected the project. And then she said, āBut he is not with out arms, he is a writer, and he is able to respond.ā
So that is how I feel about my ex, the Radical Poet. In fact, I remember when he was first involved with the polyamorous poet, reading various polyamorist literature like The Ethical Slut, quoting this rhetoric to me; I remember he and his polyamorous lover told me, āWe decided that you should be able to write about this. Itās ok.ā And I laughed, I think, or I thought about Chris Kraus, I think, or I thought about I Love Dick, but thatās not why I laughed, I laughed because I WAS ALREADY WRITING ABOUT IT
I mean, didnāt he know who he married? I have ARMS, as Sophie Calle would say. Iāll wear this story out, Iāll exhaust it by sheer repetition, Iāll use my sentimental life to make art, Iāll control my emotions while google-stalking, Iāll see the online trajectory of his latest grotesque-radical-poetic affair. Iāll see the radical poets playing soccer, sharing meals, sitting on the floor at another not-so radical poetās house. Iāll collaborate with Paul Auster. Iāll take a job as a chambermaid. I have no discourse around surveillance! Iāll call every hotel. Iāll fly to Venice. Iāll contact 107 women and ask them to interpret his emails. Youāll see. I have arms.
Danielle Dutton | Margaret the First