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  1. Há 4 dias · Join National Book Award winner Joyce Carol Oates (Them, We Were the Mulvaneys, Blonde) on her extraordinary life in letters — and her new book, Letters to a Biographer — with Jonathan Safran Foer (Here I Am, Everything is Illuminated).

  2. Há 2 dias · The ever-prolific Joyce Carol Oates is back with Butcher, a scathing fictional exploration of the medical establishment’s treatment of women. The brilliant Kent Wascom, who I had the privilege of knowing as an acquaintance in grad school, is back with an explosive, lyrical novel following a crew of misfits through the mythos of the West. R.O ...

  3. Há 4 dias · In a Darker Shade of Noir, Joyce Carol Oatesno stranger to the field herself—gathers 15 new stories that explore and turn familiar horror tropes inside out, exposing the vulnerabilities and latent powers of the female body.

  4. Há 3 dias · Inspired by the letters in her new book, Joyce Carol Oates: Letters to a Biographer (Akashic), Joyce Carol Oates, in a conversation with author and educator Rebecca Boggs Roberts, discusses her writing process and style over the past four decades. The letters in the book were part of a correspondence with a graduate student who eventually became her biographer.

  5. Há 5 dias · After 60 years in the business, Oates remains a master storyteller with her finger on the pulse of humanity, forever alive to its moral failures and flaws. Published on 23 May by 4th Estate (£16.99)

  6. Há 2 dias · Joyce Carol Oates, author of eponymous book on which Blonde is based, defended her fictionalization of Hollywood’s Golden Girl, saying that her process of “distillation” — condensing, conflating, rearranging, and inventing events — is done so in the interest of achieving a broader poetic and spiritual truth, to protest the authorial tyranny, perhaps more exploitative than any other ...

  7. Há 16 horas · A 2022 thriller by Joyce Carol Oates centers on an unknown serial murderer called the Babysitter who slaughters little boys, leaving their laundered, folded clothes beside the bodies. If not scenes from sadistic nightmares, other recent novels have surfaced the hidden order of racial unease reticulating the whole enterprise, as in Kiley Reid’s Such a Fun Age and Raven Leilani’s Luster .