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Jenny Boully's one love affair -- paperback edition

Danielle Dutton
Attempts at a Life

ISBN: 978-0-9779019-3-7
Fiction. 5"x7", 90 pages, perfectbound
March 15, 2007

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- click here for the handbound edition of Attempts at a Life

Operating somewhere between fiction and poetry, biography and theory, the pieces in Attempts at a Life, though nominally stories, might indeed be thought of as “attempts.” They do what lively stories do best, creating worlds of possibility, worlds filled with surprises, but rather than bring these worlds to some sort of neat conclusion, they constantly push out towards something new. In “S&M,” a marriage suffers from “the words you were always missing: sky, loft, music, dogs, pipes, puppets, war.” In “Mary Carmichael,” a woman with a pair of scissors and the need to “cut out her insatiable desire” slices “a veiled hat from a fern in a pot” and “a river out of a postbox.” Like the “experiments in found movement” one character conducts (in “Everybody’s Autobiography”), Dutton’s stories find movement wherever they turn, in every phrase and cadence, each sentence a small explosion of images and anthems and odd juxtapositions. This is writing in which the imagination (both writer’s and reader’s) is capable of producing almost anything at any moment, from a shiny penny to an alien metropolis, a burning village to a bright green bird.

Danielle Dutton’s stories remind me of those alluring puzzles where the pool is overflowing and emptying at the same time. Dutton’s answer? That the self is a rush of the languages of storytelling and moments of helpless intimacy, and she recalculates the lives of her numerous heroines to assert the busy and the broken.
             —Robert Glück

Danielle Dutton writes with a deft explosiveness that craters the page with stunning, unsettling precision. Here “car lights like licorice whips slick the road outside the window,” there “the puffed-thumb Emma person” sways and falls, and everywhere “the firelight is orange against the midnight of the ocean.” Her marvelous, generous Attempts at a Life proves that, like Gertrude Stein, she knows how to be “at once talking and listening.”
              —Laird Hunt

 

About Danielle Dutton

Danielle Dutton was born in Visalia, California in 1975. She is the author of a novel, SPRAWL (forthcoming from Clear Cut Press), and her work has appeared in many journals including NOON, 3rd bed, Denver Quarterly, and Fence. She lives with her husband in Colorado, where she is completing a Ph.D. in English and Creative Writing at the University of Denver.

 

Reviews of Attempts at a Life

* Listed #2 of "Ten great titles from underground presses" in Time Out New York

* A Small Press Distribution Staff-Pick and Fiction Bestseller for 7 months

"Danielle Dutton executes expert, miniscule language slips that make us slide down the surface of her narratives like raindrops streaking the windows of the last un-gentrified house in an old Victorian neighborhood. . . . An important new literary voice."
--Full review in Rain Taxi, written by Peter Conners

"Complete and devastating. . . . Dutton’s characters, and they are vivid characters, all approach the world as if it were immovable in its construction and the ways it will hurt them. The narrator of “S&M” writes, “What is it to walk away? Love treats my tongue like an oak leaf” but doesn’t walk away. She, like Madame Bovary, like Alice James, is bound by others. Even Jane Eyre, precariously tied at the rib, becomes less the recipient of a happy ending than a life dangled out to the world, incomplete."
--Full review in Octopus Magazine, written by Adam Peterson

"I would want to claim these pieces firmly as prose poems--in large part because of the way that poetry has become the big tent where everything that doesn’t fit somewhere else is welcome. . . . Dutton is certainly at home in a theoretical universe--one could discuss many of these poems--and quite profitably, I think--in terms of contemporary literary theory. However, Dutton's work is incredibly inviting--she's able to inhabit the insights of theory and then perform them without having to get bogged down in the sort of jargon or explanation that might deter the general reader (whoever you are). Dutton's work is "accessible" in the best way possible. She's working at a remarkably high level of insight while still inviting you to enjoy yourself."
--Full Review in Coldfront, written by Jason Schneiderman

"In Dutton’s appropriation of the genre’s hallmarks of tone and syntax, she recontextualizes the gothic setting. The ruined estate becomes language itself. Language is the setting which allows us to dream. And as the surrealist uses of Gothic elements remind, if we can dream in this way, we might trespass into the unfamiliar, and in so doing uncover more poignant ways to attempt life. As the drama inherent within the book’s title suggests, there is a way that Dutton’s appropriations project the human drama onto the stage of the book. It’s serious, but as many dramatists celebrate: comedy orbits a dark sun. Which is to say, this is also a very funny book."
--Full review in American Book Review, written by Selah Saterstrom

 

Excerpts from Attempts at a Life:

Excerpts may also be found in Fence V6n2, NOON, and 3rd Bed (#8).

 

Interviews with Danielle Dutton

  • in Fascicle, interviewed by Joshua Marie Wilkinson
  • in Bookslut, interviewed by Angela Stubbs

 

Readings & events for Danielle Dutton & Attempts at a Life

upcoming . . .

past . . .

October 10, 2007: Chicago, IL
Danielle Dutton & Deb Olin Unferth
7:30pm @ The Danny's Reading Series
1951 W Dikens (in Bucktown)

April 12, 2007: Boulder, CO
Danielle Dutton & Phil Lamarche
7:30 PM @ Boulder Book Store
1107 Pearl Street
Tel: 303-447-2074

April 2, 2007: Denver, CO
Danielle Dutton and Stephanie Young
8:00 pm @ Turnhalle of the Tivoli Student Union
UC Denver
Auraria Campus

March 28, 2007: Chicago, IL
Bookslut.com Reading Series
Danielle Dutton, Jay Hopler, Sarah Thyre
7:00pm @ The Hopleaf
5148 N. Clark St. (a few doors south of Foster)

March 24, 2007: New York, NY
Book Release / Party for Attempts at a Life
2 PM @ The Four-Faced Liar
165 West 4th Street (between 6th & 7th Ave)
(212) 366 0608

March 22, 2007: New York, NY
Reading for Joyful Noise: An Anthology of American Spiritual Poetry
Featuring Kazim Ali, Danielle Dutton, Timothy Donnelly, Richard Greenfield, Karla Kelsey, Frances Richard, et al!
7:00 pm @ Housing Works Used Bookstore
126 Crosby