Nudes (2021)
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Nudes (2021)
''Nudes'' is a 2021 short story collection written by British-American author Elle Nash that reflects on the lives of working-class women. It includes 24 stories split into sections named " Fluffers," "Yuri," "Pukkaki," "Moneyshot," "POV," and " Snuff." It discusses transactional relationships, sexuality, eating disorders, obsession, and death. The stories are largely set in the 1990s and 2000s, and could form part of a shared world. In the title story "Nudes", a woman has an imagined affair with her neighbor while her wife struggles with alcoholism. The collection of stories were being written since 2013. the first stories written being "Rifle," "Off Screen I Ache," and "Deathwish 006" and the last being "Nudes." Nash also states that her earliest publicized story included in this collection was "Joan Jumps into the Sea," written in 2014, published in 2015 in The Offing. For the short story "Survivalist," Nash states that she collaborated with author Elizabeth Ellen for the edit ...
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Elle Nash
Elle Nash is a British-American editor and author based in Glasgow, Scotland. She is best known for her debut novella '' Animals Eat Each Other''. Nash has stressed the importance of focusing her work on working-class characters and narratives and has criticized mainstream literature for ignoring those narratives and perpetuating the false idea of class mobility. Her writing generally revolves around women, psychosexual transgressive themes, eating disorders, and other self-destructive behavior. She lived in Denver, Colorado during the years 2015 and 2016. Nash had a daughter with her husband in 2016. She formerly lived in northwest Arkansas until 2019 at the latest. This duration of time helped inspire her novel ''Deliver Me''. Nash was born in England but moved to the United States at a young age. She first visited Glasgow during her 2018 tour for ''Animals Eat Each Other.'' Work Nash's ''I Can Remember the Meaning of Every Tarot Card But I Can’t Remember What I Texted You L ...
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Entropy (magazine)
''Entropy'' was an online magazine that covered literary and related non-literary content. The magazine featured personal essays, reviews, experimental literature, poetry, interviews, as well as writings on small press culture, video games, performance, graphic novels, interactive literature, science fiction, fantasy, music, film, art, translation, and other topics. Entropy's website also functioned as a place where those within the literary community could interact. After its launch, the magazine attracted notable contributors, such as Will Alexander, John Vercher, Seo-Young Chu, Amish Trivedi, Gabino Iglesias, C. Kubasta, Justin Petropoulos, Daniel Borzutzky, Anne Casey, Michael J. Seidlinger, and others. It was widely known for its yearly lists of the best poetry, articles, music, and more. Over its existence, Entropy also established a reputation as being as safe publishing space for essays written on the subject of # MeToo and related issues. In June 2017, Civil Coping ...
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Fiction About Self-harm
Fiction is any creative work, chiefly any narrative work, portraying character (arts), individuals, events, or setting (narrative), places that are imagination, imaginary or in ways that are imaginary. Fictional portrayals are thus inconsistent with fact, history, or plausibility. In a traditional narrow sense, fiction refers to literature, written narratives in prose often specifically novels, novellas, and short story, short stories. More broadly, however, fiction encompasses imaginary narratives expressed in any Media (communication), medium, including not just writings but also drama, live theatrical performances, films, television programs, radio dramas, comics, role-playing games, and video games. Definition and theory Typically, the fictionality of a work is publicly expressed, so the audience expects a work of fiction to deviate to a greater or lesser degree from the real world, rather than presenting for instance only factually accurate portrayals or character (arts ...
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