Wednesday, July 23, 2025

All Fours 

Cover image for All fours : a novel

By Miranda July
Riverhead Books, 2024. 326 pages. Fiction

A semi-famous artist announces her plan to drive cross-country, from LA to NY. Twenty minutes after leaving her husband and child at home, she spontaneously exits the freeway, beds down in a nondescript motel, and immerses herself in a temporary reinvention that turns out to be the start of an entirely different journey. Ditching her California life for the open road, a restless, semi-famous artist leaves her husband, child and career and reinvents herself in a motel room, embarking on a journey of self-discovery and what it means to be alive and free. 

This novel follows an unnamed, complex character as they navigate motherhood, marriage, menopause, and sexuality. Perfect for those experiencing these life stages, but also translates to broader experiences of longing, desire, grief, discontentment, and discovery. Written in a reflective and provocative manner, the author illustrates thoughts and feelings difficult to reckon with. Although they may appear unappealing or uncomfortable, July liberates them in a beautiful and authentic way. This book is ideal for fans of literary fiction and for those in a period of transition, looking for intimate prose and insights into modern relationships, aging, gender, and grief. 

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Rachel is twenty-four, a lapsed Jew who has made calorie restriction her religion. By day, she maintains an illusion of existential control, by way of obsessive food rituals. Rachel is content to carry on subsisting--until her therapist encourages her to take a ninety-day communication detox from her mother, who raised her in the tradition of calorie counting. Early in the detox, Rachel meets Miriam who works at her favorite frozen yogurt shop and is intent upon feeding her. As the two grow closer, Rachel embarks on a journey marked by mirrors, mysticism, mothers, milk, and honey.

By Rachel Yoder
Doubleday, 2021. 238 pages. Fiction

 An ambitious mother puts her art career on hold to stay at home with her newborn son, but the experience does not match her imagination. Two years later she steps into the bathroom for a break from her toddler's demands, only to discover a dense patch of hair on the back of her neck; her canines look sharper than she remembers. Her husband dismisses her fears from faraway hotel rooms. She struggles to keep her alter-canine-identity secret, and discovers the mysterious academic tome which becomes her bible, A Field Guide to Magical Women: A Mythical Ethnography.


By Julia Armfield 
Flatiron Books, 2022. 228 pages. Fiction

Leah is changed. Months earlier, she left for a routine expedition, only this time her submarine sank to the sea floor. When she finally surfaces and returns home, her wife Miri knows that something is wrong. Barely eating and lost in her thoughts, Leah rotates between rooms in their apartment, running the taps morning and night. As Miri searches for answers, desperate to understand what happened below the water, she must face the possibility that the woman she loves is slipping from her grasp. By turns elegiac and furious, wry and heartbreaking, Our Wives Under the Sea is a genre-bending exploration of the depths of love and grief at the heart of a marriage.

MT

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