You Are the Snake
By Juliet Escoria
By Juliet Escoria
By Juliet Escoria
By Juliet Escoria
Category: Short Stories | Historical Fiction | Literary Fiction | Women's Fiction
Category: Short Stories | Historical Fiction | Literary Fiction | Women's Fiction
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$16.95
Jun 18, 2024 | ISBN 9781593767747
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Jun 18, 2024 | ISBN 9781593767754
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The Orange County Register, A New Spring Book You Won’t Want to Miss
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“Cult favorite Juliet Escoria left San Diego for West Virginia and is back with a new collection of stories full of razor-sharp insights.” —Jim Ruland, Los Angeles Times
“Sharp stories that resist moralizing and leave room for the beautiful, foggy grey areas.” —Sophia June, Nylon
“Juliet Escoria isn’t afraid of writing monstrous characters . . . These stories are daring and intricately crafted. But what’s really powerful about them is that, somehow, the reader still comes away sympathizing with the characters . . . The attention she pays to her characters’ darkest inner desires and the unflattering truths she dares to uncover feel more honest than most contemporary fiction.” —Emily Gould, The Cut
“You Are the Snake expounds upon Juliet Escoria’s original and charming voice. Examining girlhood, desire, and yearning, Escoria’s stories are jolts of electricity that call to mind Mary Gaitskill, Elle Nash, or Julia Armfield, often pulling you in in just a few quick moments.” —Sam Franzini, Our Culture Mag
“You are the Snake is evidence of a life lived on the edge of a knife . . . This book feels like a triumph . . . a model for how writing about darkness need not always come implied with a whip or a prayer, but with a ruthless eye and a killer sense of humor.” —Blake Butler, Dividual
“You are the Snake [is] poised to become an instant classic.” —Barrie Miskin, Write or Die
“[Juliet Escoria] has a way of rendering with crystalline precision our most taboo thoughts and urges, and her teenage characters remind me of girls I grew up with. There are no heroes in her fiction—only people and the messiness of desire . . . The characters that populate You Are the Snake are often women coming of age in the beige suburbs, where the facade of conformity and the boredom of safety are frequently punctured by strangeness and aggression . . . Juliet’s writing is often called exceptionally brave and honest. Juliet’s writing is often called exceptionally brave and honest, and it is that, but I get the sense that for her, it’s the rest of the lying world that is the weird thing.” —Kate Durbin, Los Angeles Review of Books
“Escoria’s execution is balanced and elegant . . . You Are the Snake is a field study, a voyage through the inhospitable terrains of a live-wire mind, its transformative power subtle and invasive like the skin cells we breathe in with the dust. Each story is compact and tightly coiled, a snake ready to strike, but you never know when . . . Escoria reminds us she’s not here to entertain, or satisfy, or provide. She is here to rip off a layer of skin and expose the raw truth beneath.” —Mila Jaroniec, Southwest Review
“The stories in Escoria’s fourth book are kaleidoscopic; they shift and fall into a colorful blur.” —Booklist
“Escoria vividly captures her characters’ shared worlds. These charged and often startling stories hit hard.” —Publishers Weekly
“Short stories that expose the rages, obsessions, and plights of girls and women.” —Kirkus Reviews
“You Are the Snake is an excellent book. The writing is beautiful and calm, and the characters seemingly placid, but in each story lurks the human capacity for cruelty. Every detail seemed perfectly chosen to unnerve or enlighten. I could not stop reading, and I loved every story.” —Halle Butler, author of The New Me
“A sharply observed and unflinching collection that perfectly captures the electric joys and sorrows of living a half-feral life.” —Jenny Offill, author of Weather and Department of Speculation
“Smart and grimy, raw and moving. There is no one making more interesting work than Juliet Escoria. These stories are so beautiful and make me so uncomfortable, but that’s Escoria for you.” —Chelsea Martin, author of Tell Me I’m an Artist
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