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Lucy Ives

    Lucy Ives crafts poetry and short prose that delves into the nature of text and its boundaries. Her writing often explores unconventional forms, investigating themes of identity and artistic creation. Ives employs a minimalist style and an analytical approach, dissecting literary and artistic concepts with a distinctive voice. Her work offers readers thought-provoking and unexpected insights into contemporary culture.

    Life is Everywhere
    Cosmogony
    • Cosmogony

      • 256 pages
      • 9 hours of reading
      3.4(313)Add rating

      An energetic, witty collection of stories where the supernatural meets the anomalies of everyday life--deception, infidelity, lost cats, cute memes, amateur pornography, and more. There are analogies between being female and being left-handed, I think, or being an animal. A woman answers a Craigslist ad (to write erotic diaries for money). A woman walks onto a tennis court (from her home at the bottom of the ocean). A woman goes to the supermarket and meets a friend's husband (who happens to be an immortal demon). A woman goes for a run (and accidentally time travels). Cosmogony takes accounts of so-called normal life and mines them for inconsistencies, deceptions, and delights. Incorporating a virtuosic range of styles and genres (Wikipedia entry, phone call, physics equation, encounters with the supernatural), these stories reveal how the narratives we tell ourselves and believe are inevitably constructed, offering a glimpse of the structures that underlie and apparently determine human existence.

      Cosmogony
    • A multi-faceted, matryoshka doll of a novel which asks how far we are ever able to understand ourselves.

      Life is Everywhere