Her Body and Other Parties

Carmen Maria Machado

Pages

248

Year

2017

Difficulty

Challenging

Themes

body horror, queer desire, fairy tales reimagined, gender and violence

This is the one. Her Body and Other Parties is the book that announced Carmen Maria Machado as one of the most original voices in contemporary fiction: a short story collection that tears through genre boundaries with intelligence, daring, and a deep commitment to telling stories about women’s bodies and desires.

Why Start Here

The collection opens with “The Husband Stitch,” a retelling of the classic folktale about a woman with a green ribbon around her neck. In Machado’s version, the story becomes a meditation on what women are expected to surrender in marriage, told in a voice that is intimate, funny, and quietly terrifying. It sets the tone for everything that follows: stories that take familiar forms and twist them into something new and unsettling.

Machado moves effortlessly between registers. “Inventory” is a spare, devastating catalogue of a woman’s sexual partners as the world ends around her. “Especially Heinous,” the collection’s longest piece, reimagines every episode of Law & Order: SVU as a fever dream of doppelgangers, ghosts, and girls with bells for eyes. “The Resident” is a slow-burn horror story set at a writers’ retreat. Each story finds a different way to explore the same preoccupations: the vulnerability of women’s bodies, the strangeness of desire, and the thin line between intimacy and violence.

This is the best starting point because it gives you the full range of Machado’s talent in a compact package. If you connect with any single story, you will want to read the rest.

What to Expect

A 248-page story collection that is dense, inventive, and often disturbing. The writing demands attention. Some stories are visceral and explicit, others are elliptical and dreamlike. A finalist for the National Book Award and winner of the Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Fiction, the Shirley Jackson Award, and the National Book Critics Circle’s John Leonard Prize.

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