Kate Preziosi

Kate Preziosi is a New York City-based writer. Previously, she worked at the Wall Street Journal and theSkimm, where she was a founding team member. She holds an MFA in nonfiction from the New School.

In this novel, Kitamura’s readers will recognize the characteristic cool, quiet intensity of her prose, and her interest in the power dynamics of intimate relationships. What sets Audition apart is its improvisational nature.

Katie Kitamura’s Audition

Natasha Brown’s sophomore novel, Universality, begins with a glossy magazine story. A young man named Jake is on the run after bludgeoning an acquaintance nearly to death during an illegal rave on a farm in northern England. His weapon of choice? A solid gold bar.

Natasha Brown’s Universality

In the pages of Versailles, Davis can be found turning over the same questions that would govern her memoir twenty years in the future: What constitutes a life? And, what is a soul?

Kathryn Davis’s Versailles
“Can you tell me a story?” Nin asks, invoking a ‘story game’ that she says they once played every night as kids. Instead of the usual stories about talking animals or flying carpets, Nin wants to hear true stories about her sister’s life outside of the room. Hui is reluctant. The world is disappointing and broken, she says. But Nin insists.
Shze-Hui Tjoa’s The Story Game
The women’s eighteen-and-under boxing tournament at the center of Rita Bullwinkel’s debut novel Headshot is not to be taken seriously. At least, not if you take the narrator’s word for it.
Rita Bullwinkel’s Headshot

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