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Mumia Abu-Jamal
Kathy Acker
Erje Ayden
Jean Baudrillard
Barbara Barg
Bernadette Corporation
Dhoruba Bin Wahad
William Burroughs
Pierre Clastres
Maurice G. Dantec
Gilles Deleuze
Jane DeLynn
Tony Duvert
Shulamith Firestone
Bob Flanagan
Michel Foucault
Eldon Garnet
Rainer Ganahl
Veronica Gonzalez
Félix Guattari
Amira Hass
Fanny Howe
Luce Irigaray
Alain Joxe
Liz Kotz
Chris Kraus
Julia Kristeva
Jurg Laederach
Sylvère Lotringer
Jean-François Lyotard
Christian Marazzi
Cookie Müeller
Heiner Müller
Eileen Myles
François Peraldi
David Rattray
Gerald Raunig
Suely Rolnik
Ann Rower
Assata Shakur
Michelle Tea
Lynne Tillman
Masha Tupitsyn
Paul Virilio
Paolo Virno
Mark von Schlegell
David Wojnarowicz
Heather Woodbury
Nina Zivancevic
Chris Kraus

Torpor

[Kraus] looks at a very old love story from a new and often startling perspective, perfecting something she started with her first book, the infamous I Love Dick. Kraus's dry, occasionally terse style, her use of time and place and lexicon and architecture and cultural mood in place of communications or feelings is a new language. A non-emotional language for emotions. I want to tell her thank you, and mazel tov.

—Lisa Carver, Globe

...Sylvie wanted to believe that misery could simply be replaced with happiness. Time was a straight line, stretching out before you. If you could create a golden kind of time and lay it right beside the other time, the time of horror, Bad History could just recede into the distance without ever having to be resolved.

—Chris Kraus, Torpor


Set at the dawn of the New World Order, Chris Kraus' third novel loops back to the era where I Love Dick, her cult-classic debut, began. It's summer, 1991: post-MTV, pre-AOL. Jerome Shafir and Sylvie Green, two displaced New Yorkers who can no longer afford an East Village apartment, set off on a journey across the former Soviet Bloc with the specious goal of adopting a Romanian orphan. Nirvana's on the radio everywhere they go, and wars are erupting across Yugoslavia. Savagely ironic and deeply lyrical, Torpor reveals the negative entropy of the present, haunted by the persistence of historical memory.

"Torpor is as good a Grand Tour love story as James or Wharton, a brilliant study of a Holocaust survivor, a brilliant study of the moral character of philosophers, the art world, academia, ambition, real estate, sex, orphans, and the fall of Romania. She writes about the strangeness of the world in a clear American prose filled with emotion, but with no vapors of style and forced effect to hide behind. I've read all of her bookCovers. Chris Kraus is a great writer." — Michael Tolkin, author of The Player and Among the Dead

"Torpor is probably the least torpid work of prose you are likely to read in a long time. Horrifically vulnerable and preternaturally shrewd, limpid and Byzantine in the same breath, Chris Kraus' book is the kind of surprise package, like Bunuel's Viridiana, that blows up in the face of its target to the delight of the rest of the world." -- Gary Indiana, author of Resentment, and The Schwarzenegger Syndrome


Torpor

“Chris Kraus believes in 'subliminal cross-referencing' of times and cultures and describes it in a lively and highly entertaining language free of unnecessary academic musings. Somewhat like that great art historian and sociologist Arnold Hausser, the author believes in the spirit of her own age but is able to treat it with 'grace' that is refracted through the multicontoured   mirror of all other preceding eras.”

—Nina Zivancevic, American Book Review