Amber Tamblyn is an author, actress and director. She's been
nominated for an Emmy, Golden Globe and Independent Spirit Award
for her work in television and film. She is the author of three
books of poetry including the critically acclaimed best seller,
Dark Sparkler.
Her debut novel Any Man will be released in June of 2018 on Harper
Perennial and a book of non-fiction essays for Crown in 2019. Most
recently she wrote and directed the feature film, "Paint it Black",
based on the novel by Janet Fitch, starring Alia Shawkat, Janet
McTeer and Alfred Molina, currently on Netflix. She reviews books
of poetry by women for Bust Magazine, is a contributing writer for
The New York Times and is a founding member of Time's Up. She lives
in New York.
"An explosive, shapeshifting piece of literary real estate, Amber
Tamblyn's arresting debut offers a scathing portrait of American
celebrity culture and the way in which it transmutes human tragedy
into a vicious circus; victims are forgotten as likes and shares
swirl, and 'news' becomes a squalid orgy, a lurid feast. Tamblyn
takes every risk in this astonishing and innovative work, and
succeeds, gloriously." - Janet Fitch, bestselling author of The
Revolution of Marina M. and Paint It Black
"Amber Tamblyn's debut novel, Any Man, is a beautifully written and
carefully curated examination of toxic masculinity, rape culture
and our society as a whole...a sprawling conversation about sexual
assault and how prevalent it is in our society, regardless of
gender....Everything about this novel is raw and exposed...this is
the time to stop denying these things are out there just because
hearing, seeing or reading about them makes us want to turn the
other way--and that is what Tamblyn has achieved in this novel, a
way to make our eyes stay on the page." - Paperback Paris
"Get ready to hold your breath. Amber Tamblyn's Any Man is a
genre-bending gender-bending brilliant blow torch of a debut novel
amplifying the complexities of sexual violence and the radical
costs of survival. At the center of the novel is a serial rapist
named Maude who reduces the men in her path to objects of prey.
We're not used to thinking of this equation, and that's the point.
This is the story of a monstrous woman made from the darkness
inside all of us, a woman who meets patriarchy head-on and shreds
it, leaving men traveling the journey that women must make every
day of their lives--not the hero's journey, but the victim's. Not
to emerge heroic and victorious, but to emerge from shame and
violence with empathy, compassion, and the radical ability to
endure together. This book changes everything." - Lidia Yuknavitch,
bestselling author of THE BOOK OF JOAN
""In her first novel, poet Tamblyn (Bang Ditto) nimbly flips the
usual dynamic of sexual predation, writing about a female serial
rapist who preys on men.. The suspense of whether Maude will be
apprehended and her motives understood propels this powerful
meditation on the horrors of rape culture." - Publishers Weekly
"Poet and actress Amber Tamblyn's debut novel, Any Man blends prose
and poetry in a searing exploration of sexual aggression.Tamblyn is
able to shed a harsh new light on how real, actual, pervasive
sexual offenses are treated (and mistreated) in this country, and
the world writ large." - Vanity Fair, Summer's Ultimate Fiction
List
Any Man is a breathtaking gut-punch of a novel. Here is the cost of
sexual violence: our bodies, our minds, our culture. Flipping the
typical narrative of woman-as-victim, Tamblyn follows six different
men, each of whom has been viciously attacked by a serial rapist
named Maude. In a masterful exploration of literary form, we follow
them through poetry, journals, talk shows, group therapy sessions,
internet chat rooms, letters, voicemails, and an extended Twitter
search so real and right now the page became a screen in my hands.
From the first lightning-bolt sentence it felt impossible to put
down. But I had to put it down. I had to breathe. I had to
interrogate my own heart. Real talk: this subject matter is hard as
hell. It hurts. It's so much easier not to look, to pretend such
violence doesn't exist even when we know--we know. we know and know
and know--that it does. Enough, Tamblyn is saying. It's supposed to
hurt. That's how we heal. - Megan Stielstra, The Wrong Way to Save
Your Life
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