Frank, funny and horny, the latest work from multi-hyphenate Miranda July offers a disruptive and decidedly female take on the mid-life crisis novel. Creativity clashes with domesticity, pansexual desire crashes into perimenopause in this gloriously messy narrative, which is sometimes hilariously offhand, sometimes devastatingly sad but always knife-sharp. Read this article for free: Already have an account? To continue reading, please subscribe: * Frank, funny and horny, the latest work from multi-hyphenate Miranda July offers a disruptive and decidedly female take on the mid-life crisis novel.
Creativity clashes with domesticity, pansexual desire crashes into perimenopause in this gloriously messy narrative, which is sometimes hilariously offhand, sometimes devastatingly sad but always knife-sharp. Read unlimited articles for free today: Already have an account? Frank, funny and horny, the latest work from multi-hyphenate Miranda July offers a disruptive and decidedly female take on the mid-life crisis novel. Creativity clashes with domesticity, pansexual desire crashes into perimenopause in this gloriously messy narrative, which is sometimes hilariously offhand, sometimes devastatingly sad but always knife-sharp.
July is a Los Angeles-based writer-artist-actor-filmmaker whose books include The First Bad Man and No One Belongs Here More Than You. All Fours’ unnamed first-person narrator seems to be a lot like July herself. “Picture a woman who had success in several med.