Danielle Dutton’s fiction has appeared in magazines such as
Harper’s, BOMB, Fence, and Noon. She is the author of a collection
of hybrid prose pieces, Attempts at a Life, which Daniel Handler in
Entertainment Weekly called "indescribably beautiful," and an
experimental novel, S P R A W L, a finalist for the Believer Book
Award. In 2015, she wrote the texts for Here Comes Kitty: A Comic
Opera, an artists’ book with collages by Richard Kraft.
Dutton holds a PhD in Literature and Writing from the University of
Denver, an MFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and
a BA in History from the University of California at Santa Cruz.
Prior to her current position on the creative writing faculty at
Washington University in St. Louis, she taught in the Jack Kerouac
School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa and was the book designer
at Dalkey Archive Press.
In 2010, Dutton founded the small press Dorothy, a publishing
project, named for her great aunt Dorothy Traver, a librarian who
drove a bookmobile through the back hills of southern California.
Now in its fifth year, the press’s books are widely reviewed. The
press itself has been praised in the New York Times and Chicago
Tribune, and Dutton has been interviewed in the Paris Review,
Kirkus, and elsewhere for her work promoting innovative women
writers.
Literary Hub, 1 of the 20 Best Novels of the Decade
"The duchess herself would be delighted at her resurrection in
Margaret the First . . . Dutton expertly captures the pathos
of a woman whose happiness is furrowed with the anxiety of
underacknowledgment . . . [She] surprisingly and delightfully
offers not just a remarkable duchess struggling in her duke's world
but also an intriguing dissection of an unusually bountiful
partnership of (almost) equals." —Katharine Grant, The New York
Times Book Review
"This slender but dense imagining of the life of Margaret
Cavendish, a pioneering 17th–century writer and wife of the
aristocrat William Cavendish, could be classified as a more
elliptical cousin of Hilary Mantel's Thomas Cromwell novels . . .
Ms. Dutton's style is tightly poetic. 'It was indescribable what
she wanted,' she writes of Margaret. 'She wanted to be 30 people .
. . To live as nature does, in many ages, in many brains.'" —John
Williams, The New York Times
"Although Margaret the First is set in 17th century London, it's
not a traditional work of historical fiction. It is an experimental
novel that, like the works of Jeanette Winterson, draws on language
and style to tell the story . . . There is a restless ambition to
[Danielle Dutton's] intellect."—Michele Filgate, The Los Angeles
Times
"Margaret Cavendish (1623–73) did something that was vanishingly
rare for women in 17th–century England: She became a famous writer
. . . This is the story Danielle Dutton tells in her beguiling
biographical novel Margaret the First . . . The loveliest
aspect of this novel is its gentle, wondering portrayal of the
Cavendish marriage. William, a poet and patron of the arts,
encourages his wife's ambitions even as they bring notoriety upon
the household . . . Margaret laments when told of the scandal her
writing provokes. Yet this inimitable woman made her reputation
anyway, and Ms. Dutton's novel charmingly enhances it." —Sam Sacks,
The Wall Street Journal
"Dutton's Duchess . . . exists, in this book, as a study in textual
vestiges, as much palimpsest as person . . . There are vivid,
episodic bursts of narration, recounting a birthday party, the
teasing of her by siblings, and Margaret's time at court in Oxford,
after the revolution interrupted her aristocratic family's bucolic
life . . . In Margaret the First, there is plenty of room for play.
Dutton's work serves to emphasize the ambiguities of archival
proof, restoring historical narratives to what they have perhaps
always already been: provoking and serious fantasies, convincing
reconstructions, true fictions." —Lucy Ives, The New Yorker
"Danielle Dutton engagingly embellishes the life of Margaret the
First, the infamous Duchess of Newcastle–upon–Tyne." —Vanity
Fair
"With refreshing and idiosyncratic style, Dutton portrays the inner
turmoil and eccentric genius of an intellectual far ahead of her
time." —Jane Ciabattari, BBC
"This vivid novel is a dramatization of the life of 17th–century
Duchess Margaret Cavendish . . . While the novel takes place in the
1600s, the explorations of marriage, ambition, and feminist ideals
are timeless." —The Boston Globe
"What an excellent subject on which to hang a novel . . . Dutton's
literary voice is unusual, and arresting." —Sarah Murdoch, Toronto
Star
"Dutton refreshes Cavendish's words for a contemporary audience,
rendering them relevant and powerful once more." —Megan Burbank,
The Portland Mercury
"Conjured in a prose at once lush and spare —so precise and yet so
rich in observation —Danielle Dutton's Margaret is a creature
exquisitely of her own creation, who can tell herself, and perhaps
believe, that she 'had rather appear worse in singularity, than
better in the Mode.'"—Ellen Akins, The Minneapolis Star Tribune
"A perfect dagger of book: sharp, dark sentences, in and out
quick." —Jonny Diamond, Literary Hub
"Layered and engrossing. . . Dutton's profile constructs [Margaret]
as a fully formed, complicated human being, as a woman whose
interests and inclinations stem from a complex personal history.
It's this profile that's the star of the novel as much as its
subject, since it deftly weaves together primary and secondary
sources to form a wholly integrated, believable and gripping
account of a woman who didn't belong to the times in which she was
born, not least because these times were too volatile for her to
ever plant herself in them."—Electric Literature
"Dutton's remarkable second novel is as vividly imaginative as its
subject, the 17th–century English writer and eccentric Margaret
Cavendish . . . Though Dutton doesn't shy away from the 'various
and extravagant; antics (such as attending the theater in a topless
gown) that earned her subject notoriety and the nickname 'Mad
Madge,' her Margaret is a woman of fierce vitality, creativity, and
courage. Incorporating lines from Cavendish herself as well as
Virginia Woolf, whose essays introduced Dutton to Cavendish, this
novel is indeed reminiscent of Woolf's Orlando in its sensuous
appreciation of the world and unconventional approach to
fictionalized biography. Dutton's boldness, striking prose, and
skill at developing an idiosyncratic narrative should introduce her
to the wider audience she deserves."—Publishers Weekly, starred
review
"Despite its period setting and details, this novel —more poem than
biography —feels rooted in the experiences of contemporary women
with artistic and intellectual ambitions. Margaret's alternating
bursts of inspiration and despair about her work may feel achingly
familiar to Dutton's likely readers, many of whom will probably
also be aspiring writers."—Kirkus Reviews
"Indebted to Virginia Woolf in both content and form, Dutton
examines the life of a woman who upended social norms by being
intelligent, imaginative, and ambitious without apology.
Cavendish's intellectual and personal growth are explored with
sensitivity in poetic prose style. This short literary book offers
big rewards to readers interested in the complex mind of a woman
ahead of her time."—Sarah Cohn, Library Journal
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