Hothouse
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
Karyna MyGlynn takes readers on tour through the half-haunted house of the contemporary American psyche with wit, whimsy, and candid confession. Disappointing lovers surface in the bedroom; in the bathroom, "the drained tub ticks with mollusks & lobsters;" revenge fantasies and death lurk in the basement where they rightly belong. With lush imagery and au courant asides, Hothouse surprises and delights.
Karyna McGlynn is the author of I Have to Go Back to 1994 and Kill a Girl and three chapbooks. She is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and Translation at Oberlin College.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
McGlynn (I Have to Go Back to 1994 and Kill a Girl) embraces the spectacle that is the first-person pronoun as she probes the possibilities of a performative and narrative-driven voice. At its core, the collection is an exploration of 21st-century femininity and gendered experience, though the poems are peppered with early Hollywood tropes and reminiscences not all fond of girlhood and adolescence. Many of McGlynn's stronger lines ("I catch my silvered reflection/ in the open fridge and wince") belong firmly to the confessional lineage, but McGlynn casually flirts with camp and laces her poems with self-deprecation: "She takes a swig from a beer with three butts in it./ She orders the shrimp scampi/ and feels real sophisticated." Cameos by screen starlets such as Veronica Lake and Marlene Dietrich suggest that McGlynn seeks to interrogate and engage the male gaze as she participates in traditions of female burlesque ("I say, Audience, O Audience! Why do you seek to destroy me?"). There is also an element of a tug-of-war between the sexes that marks the collection, like a "he said, she said" story: "I hope you're happy with yourself./ This is what happens, I said. You're histrionic./ If it's any consolation, I hate myself." McGlynn confronts demons with verve, though some readers may wish for a little more seriousness.