Some years ago, I was interviewing a Columbia neurologist for a potential article on imaging. After a tour of her laboratory and MRI scanner, dialogue about the frontal cortex and the mysteries of ...
Patricia Lockwood’s humorous and autobiographical “Will There Ever Be Another You” (Riverhead, 256 pages, $29) recounts a few years in the life of a writer named Patricia, whose career mirrors the ...
One solution for representing the internet-augmented discontinuity of contemporary life is the fragment novel. Seas of white space separate paragraphs, which together compose archipelago chapters; ...
There's something slightly disorienting that takes place when a word is said over and over again. Platypus. Platypus. Platypus. The more the word is repeated, the more it loses its meaning while ...
Late in her 2017 memoir, “Priestdaddy,” Patricia Lockwood writes about growing up in a world of “male systems and male anger,” a world that began at home with the actions of her father, a bombastic, ...
On a humid evening in May, Patricia Lockwood, who writes with the impish verve and provocative guilelessness of a peeing cupid, was scanning the menu at a Mexican restaurant near her home, in Savannah ...
Some years ago, I was interviewing a Columbia neurologist for a potential article on imaging. After a tour of her laboratory and MRI scanner, dialogue about the frontal cortex and the mysteries of ...
In 2020, Patricia Lockwood lost her mind. Not in the way that everyone lost their minds — all the grocery-sanitizing and sourdough-baking; the insistence that Zoom “raves” were fun and that your ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results