Maria Adelmann is the author of the short story collection Girls of a Certain Age, which explores the many impossible choices of modern girl and womanhood. Her work has been published by Tin House, n+1, Electric Literature, McSweeney's Internet Tendency, The Threepenny Review, the Indiana Review, Epoch, AQR, MQR, and many others, and has been selected by The Best American Short Stories as a distinguished story. You can follow her on Twitter or Instagram @ink176. How to Be Eaten is her first novel.
"If not for the title (its innuendo), if not for the cover (its
brilliant and naughty heightening of the innuendo), if not for the
premise (fairy-tale heroines in group therapy for their traumas),
then read it for the question at the heart of the whole thing: Can
telling your story free you from reliving your story? Maria
Adelmann's book reads quick and popcorny, like a reality show come
to life. But it deepens as it goes, peeking at not just the wolves
behind the camera, but those sitting, with popcorn on their laps,
in front of the screen."--NPR, Best Books of the Year
Named a Best Book of May by TIME Magazine, Glamour, and Bustle
Highlighted as a Hot New Release by The Washington Post, BookRiot,
USA TODAY, Lithub and The Millions "Even better than it sounds, HOW
TO BE EATEN presents vividly real women haunted by their fairy tale
pasts in this deliciously angsty debut. Pure fun pulsing with a
dark heart."--Rachel Yoder, author of Nightbitch
"A fairy tell reimagining unlike any other you've ever
experienced...How To Be Eaten is an intriguing take on what it
means to exist in the world as a woman in the 21st century and
trauma in the digital age. It's also just a really entertaining
read."--BOOKRIOT
"Adelmann travels the well-worn paths of some of the Brothers Grimm
most famous fairy tales with stylistic panache and 21st-century
verve. However, it's her nuanced consideration of our own
culpability that makes this book unique. In the end, Adelmann's
true subject is actually her audience, the great anonymous we who
consumes the horrors of violent husbands, ravaging wolves, hungry
witches, and made-for-TV love stories with such compulsive demand
we never pause to think what might come after the happy ending.
Both a meditation on trauma and a sendup of our society's obsession
with scripted reality, this book sings."--KIRKUS, Starred
Review
"a fresh and inventive gem."--Publishers Weekly
"A clever spin on age-old fairy tales."--New York Post
"A sardonic, poignant novel that moves in unexpected directions
across each and every page, How to Be Eaten is a whip-smart
invitation to reimagine familiar fairy tales in a modern
age."--Kerry McHugh, Shelf Awareness
"Adelmann spins gold...weaving together two high-concept premises
into one coherent and complex narrative that pulls off several
impressive tricks along the way...The worldbuilding is immersive
and original, and she doesn't reimagine the fairytales she pulls
from so much as implode them...The question of what happens to the
fairytale characters after the fairytale ends? could easily be
taken in a run-of-the-mill direction, but Adelmann answers it in a
way that feels genuinely fresh, thrilling, and even
self-referential, baking into the novel's premise the very idea
that stories, no matter how often they're told and retold, can
always be broken apart and fashioned into something new."
--AUTOSTRADDLE
"Adelmann's debut is a darkly funny, thought-provoking take on what
happens after happily ever after."--TIME Magazine
"Adelmann's feminist debut novel takes the classic fairy tales of
our youth and turns them on their head."--The Millions
"After her well-received collection Girls of a Certain Age,
Adelmann offers a wickedly imaginative work envisioning fairy-tale
characters as members of a trauma support group in contemporary New
York."--LIBRARY JOURNAL
"Each narrative has a strangeness heightened by twists and modern
details...Adelmann wants us to reconsider stories we think we know
inside-out and see the inequity and terror we've ingested from
fairy tales. Her most fiendish trick may be one that she shows to
the reader long before the characters learn it -- an important
reminder not to take anything at face value."--WASHINGTON POST
"Gorgeously written and mind-bending, How To Be Eaten is fiction as
a magic trick: by redrawing these archetypal characters with
modern, vivid, and gothic specificity, Adelmann reminds us that, be
it enchanting or devastating, our myths remain."
--Julia May Jonas, author of Vladimir
"In this modern retelling of classic fairy tales, Adelmann shatters
'happily ever after'...and brilliantly brings to light the
historical exploitation and manipulation of female trauma in the
media. With the current fascination with true crime and reality
television, this powerful first novel holds up a mirror to the
reader and challenges our perceptions of truth."--Booklist, Starred
Review
"In this wildly imaginative and trenchant novel, female characters
from mythic fairytales emerge as modern-day heroes capable of
reclaiming their lives from the trauma of their past. A deft
exploration of trauma, authorship, the power of storytelling, and
the healing potential of connection, How To Be Eaten will stun
readers page after page, offering an unforgettable, empowering, and
above all entertaining tale of reclamation and
transformation."--Christie Tate, New York Times bestselling author
of Group
"It's a conceit that works beautifully....The novel feels
innovative--witty and feminist, too."--The Center for Fiction
"Maria Adelman does more than reinvent the fairytale, she brings it
into the twenty-first century, frankenbites and all. From Bluebeard
to The Bachelor, Adelmann spins 'familiar' tales together into
gold. Funny, violent, cutting, and insightful, How to Be Eaten made
me want to join this unlikely group of confidants and start
confessing my own secrets, just to keep the conversation
going."--Gwen E. Kirby, author of Shit Cassandra Saw
"Maria Adelmann's debut novel is jagged and daring and darkly
funny. Her wit is an exquisite instrument, one she uses to shred
the myths by which capitalism and patriarchy exploit and commodify
the female quest for love and selfhood. If you've ever hate-watched
a reality TV show, or struggled with the blithe misogyny of a
fairytale, this is the book for you."
--Steve Almond, author of Bad Stories and All the Secrets of the
World
"Shocking, surprisingly humorous, and heavily in tune with modern
depictions of feminine trauma and the surprising bonds such
experiences can create between wildly different personalities, How
to Be Eaten is a richly imaginative read for those who like their
fairytales on the darker side."--The Manhattan Book Review
"The classic characters transfer horrifyingly well to our
times...The book is funny and dark, and poignant, as the characters
long to be believed in a world that often sees violence against
women as just a myth."--GLAMOUR, Ten Best Books of the Month
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