Bøger af Nadia de Vries
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122,95 kr. Thistle is a young woman whose father, a pilot, dies suddenly in a plane crash when she is thirteen years old. The airline's compensation payout is substantial but doesn't assuage the family's grief. By the time she is seventeen, Thistle has lost most of her teenage years trying to make sense of her father's premature death. In the meantime, her body is developing, and she finds herself sexualized and objectified by men against her will. Teenaged Thistle is increasingly aware of her allure but unsure of how to use that to her advantage. When her mother gifts her a camera, Thistle decides to turn the lens on herself, capturing her nude body in various poses just before she turns eighteen.
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- 122,95 kr.
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78,95 kr. Dostoyevsky Wannabe goes to Amsterdam, edited by Nadia de Vries (author of Dark Hour, also by Dostoyevsky Wannabe) this anthology features poetry and prose from Lucia Dove, SJ Fowler, Helena Grande, Dominic Jaeckle, Christodoulos Makris, and Divya Nadkarni.
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- 78,95 kr.
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78,95 kr. Dark Hour collects forty-five epigrammatical, elusive poems; while often pointed, pithy and direct, the voice speaks from a kind of torpor. It's solitary, bereft, ingrown, prone to gothic moments (angels and vampires flit past the curtains) - as if a childhood fever was prolonged into adolescence, when desire made itself available through movie tropes. In this convalescent atmosphere, an exterior perspective is imagined, and out of her perceived weakness, the speaker manufactures an image of her "cuteness."- Sam Riviere, The Poetry Review Nadia de Vries' debut collection opens with the standard disclaimers: These poems are a work of fiction.The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author's imagination.Yet what arises from the author's imagination is a world of reclaimed fairy tales, a "technological sublime," the fine arts rendered into the dark arts, and girlhood engineered as a contagion, insinuating itself into the sickly heart of the patriarchy to launch its fatal attack. Dark Hour is a countdown in verse, to that moment when the author's imagination reveals itself as our new reality, and during which we learn to fine-cut poetry into pocketknives and poison. May your fears become abundant like girls.- Mia You, author of I, Too, Dislike It (1913 Press, 2016)Dutch poet Nadia de Vries's debut collection, Dark Hour captures the plight of poets writing in the digital age. Often composing scenes involving sickness, lassitude, abandonment, and death, she pokes fun at the seriousness of these themes, as though playfully provoking them to bite her. Not unlike Rimbaud, she bears witness to great social upheavals - although hers are domestic rather than militaristic. The minutiae of interpersonal frustrations occasion images of spiritual conflict, which are condensed into laconic, jewel-like poems, many not more than six or seven lines.- Jeffrey Grunthaner, Hyperallergic
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- 78,95 kr.
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118,95 kr. Know Thy Audience, Nadia de Vries's third poetry collection, disavows the platitude from which it takes its name and makes the reader complicit in both her aggression and her submission, sparked by a history of domestic abuse that escapes all euphemism and metaphor - but not poetry altogether
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- 118,95 kr.