Wild milk

Sabrina Orah Mark

Book - 2018

"Fiction. Jewish Studies. Women's Studies. WILD MILK is like Borscht Belt meets Leonora Carrington; it's like Donald Barthelme meets Pony Head; it's like the Brothers Grimm meet Beckett in his swim trunks at the beach. In other words, this remarkable collection of stories is unlike anything you've read"--Provided by publisher.

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FICTION/Mark Sabrina
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Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Mark Sabrina Due Dec 29, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Published
St. Louis, MO : Dorothy, a publishing project [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Sabrina Orah Mark (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Subtitle from front cover.
Physical Description
167 pages ; 18 cm
ISBN
9780997366686
  • Wild milk
  • Tweet
  • Clay
  • My brother Gary mad a movie & this is what happened
  • Everything was beautiful and nothing hurt
  • Mother at the dentist
  • For the safety of our country
  • Sister
  • Spells
  • Very nervous family
  • Pool
  • Roster
  • Taxmen
  • Two jokes walk into a bar
  • The maid, the mother, the snail & I
  • Ar yu my mother?
  • The stepmother
  • Stick figure family
  • Father
  • I did not eat the child
  • Let's do this once more, but this time with feeling
  • Seventh wife
  • There's a hole in the bucket
  • Don't just do something, stand there!
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Poet Mark's fiction debut (after Tsim Tsum) constructs a fantastical and absurd world in which characters' understanding of the everyday is twisted and skewed. In this short story collection, all bets are off, as a mother's calls to her daughter from her dentist appointments become increasingly fraught ("Mother at the Dentist") and Hillary Clinton is someone's cleaning lady ("Are You My Mother?"). In "The Roster," a new professor arrives to her first day of teaching only to discover that her students include such luminaries as Bruno Schulz and Samuel Beckett, all of whom she becomes obsessed with, in a clever and meta story about literature. In some stories, Mark takes a word or concept and deconstructs it-such as with a personification of Twitter in the aptly named "Tweet." It's a flex of her poetic chops, though it's hit-or-miss in this collection. The strongest entries are the ones that most resemble traditional stories structurally, and where some rules exist to corral the extent of Mark's expansive imagination. Still, Mark's language is truly stunning ("That the message was now a poem made it no less a beast, but this beast might one day grow to love us."). Mark's collection is perplexingly captivating; she applies a poet's playful sensibilities to the fiction form and creates something astonishing and new. (Oct.) c Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Mark (Tsim Tsum, 2009, etc.) turns her poet's eye to the sublimely surreal in this collection of domestic oddities.Over the course of 24 short, strange tales, Mark exposes the reader to the woman who loses her baby in the blizzard created when his caretaker begins to snow; the woman who marries Poems; the woman who becomes a tree to float her giant daughters to safety; the woman who does not eat the child. Though each of these characters is embroiled in a different danger, the sense of them as archetypes (the woman rather than a woman) and further as facets of the author's own lived experience filtered through a private symbology renders the stories at once both more universal and more personal. It is a fine slight of hand which Mark performs over and over throughout the collection: Language as precise and bitter as a pill is used to describe both the unknown and the unknowable; utterly impossible characters remind us uncomfortably of ourselves. The stories drift in the way of the best fairy talesreleased from dependence on narrative sensibility to become both more odd and more true than any mere fiction. Many utilize a dream's abrupt authority. "Louis C.K., my husband, piles all my seahorses in the middle of our king-sized bed and starts shouting," begins "Let's Do This Once More, But This Time with Feeling." Other stories deploy a poet's love of words for words' sake in long, luxurious taxonomies: "The husband doesn't want his seventh wife to be sad and so he brings her Flounder. He brings her Mullet, Snook, Pickerel, Salmon, and Perch. He brings her Grunt. He brings her Bitterling and Milkfish. He brings her Tuna." Regardless of their form or feel, each is a fully rendered exploration of impossibility that loses nothing in its translation from the author's imagination to the reader's eye. It is a common cop-out to label the vagaries of nontraditional fiction written by women as experiments in language or voice and thus dismiss their agency in the "real" world in which plot-based fictions thrive. This collection, however, through both its humor and its sorrow, rings a universal chord. How to make sense of a world that refutes all sense and yet murders us when we cannot anticipate its next move? How to love in a world that uses our love as a weapon?Stories in which laughter is sometimes the only response to sorrow, beauty is strange, and love is fierce and unending. A necessary book for our perilous age. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.