The Paris Review

Staff Picks: Screen Tests, Souvenirs, and Sam Ospovat

Kate Zambreno. Photo: Tom Hines.

When I was very, very young and very, very unhappy working in a bookstore, I read on my lunch breaks Kate Zambreno’s , a novel about another very unhappy shopgirl, and felt as though I understood it on a cellular level. Zambreno’s books have a way of getting under your skin, and her willingness to write ugly, to approach the banal and the cliché as just another tool and subvert it into works of rage and oftentimes real beauty, is part of the appeal. , her latest, pairs a first half composed of very short, very funny pieces of fiction (some of which were published in ) with a second half of longer essays,

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EDITOR EMILY STOKES MANAGING EDITOR KELLEY DEANE McKINNEY DEPUTY EDITOR LIDIJA HAAS ASSOCIATE EDITOR AMANDA GERSTEN WEB EDITOR SOPHIE HAIGNEY ASSISTANT EDITORS OLIVIA KAN-SPERLING, ORIANA ULLMAN EDITORS AT LARGE HARRIET CLARK, ANDREW MARTIN, DAVID S.

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