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From her early stories on, Kauffman has
redefined terms — of literature and of human nature. Here, short
paragraphs cut across genres to assemble a poetics of narrative. She
shows us fiction’s elements grounded in the materiality of language:
plot as ground, action as just what it looks like, one word after another.
Five on Fiction sets out the bones and flesh of narrative, in bits and
pieces, evidence of its connections to the physical and natural world.
Janet
Kauffman grew up on a tobacco farm in Pennsylvania and has worked on
farms, and with language, all her life. She has published several
collections of poetry and 3 books of short fiction: Places in the
World a Woman Could Walk, which immediately thrust her to the
forefornt of her generation of writers, Obscene Gestures for Women and Characters
on the Loose. Her trilogy novels, Flesh Made Word, includes Collaborators,
The Body in Four Parts, and Rot. She lives in Michigan,
where she has restored wetlands on her farm and worked for watershed
protection.
“ This gathering of stories [Characters on the Loose]
leaves little doubt that Kauffman is a formidable if unruly talent,
contorting narrative
into teasing and surprising shapes.”
—Bill Marx, Boston Globe
"Janet Kauffman’s latest book,
Five on Fiction, consists of five
sequences, each composed of ten very short
prose pieces.
Each sequence is ostensibly about one aspect
of fiction writing. These are odd, tentative
pieces, operating somewhere between prose poems,
essays, and short fiction. The titles, such
as “On Eliminating Characters from Fiction” and “On
the Transportation of Background to Foreground,” read
like section titles from a perverse creative-writing
handbook. At moments there are what feel like
fragments of essays on writing: “If you
don’t say the name of the person, a good
many things are possible in a sentence. . .
.” Other moments offer what feel like
bits of lost plots, meditations on the natural
world (and its relation to narrative), reflection
on human and animal territories, lost voices,
commands, and hats made out of sticks. Five
on Fiction thus demands that you read
between the genres you are used to, making
brief forays
out of but always coming back to the mulchy
space that exists beneath the formation of
genres. This is mixed-genre work, but it has
an unexpected modesty to it. And in addition
Kauffman seems to be operating by touch rather
than with clear purpose. The majority of writers
become complacent, falling back on what has
worked for them in the past. Kauffman is one
of the few writers I know who consistently
takes more chances with each new book. In Five
on Fiction these chances pay off remarkably
well.
—Brian Evenson, Review of Contemporary
Fiction
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