【Well-Endowed Customer and Young Female Escort】
The Well-Endowed Customer and Young Female EscortArt of Distance No. 24
The Art of Distance
In March, The Paris Review launched The Art of Distance, a newsletter highlighting unlocked archive pieces that resonate with the staff of the magazine, quarantine-appropriate writing on the Daily, resources from our peer organizations, and more. Read Emily Nemens’s introductory letter here, and find the latest unlocked archive pieces below.
“Last week I wrote about the relative calm of the dog days of summer in NYC. But these same days of languor are hardly that elsewhere around the country and the globe. Wednesday I was rooting for Fernanda Melchor’s Hurricane Seasonat the International Booker Prizes while Hurricane Laura bore down on Louisiana and Texas—a disconcerting coincidence, to say the least. The storm dissipated more quickly than expected, but that did not make its landfall in southwest Louisiana any less destructive. Earlier this month I felt an eerie prescience welcoming the publication of Shruti Swamy’s debut collection, A House Is a Body(we published the title story, about a mother’s evacuation from a wildfire, in 2018), as California fires flared again. And until a few weeks ago, the only derechoI knew was dance partner to izquierda. The Art of Distance began as a meditation on our social distancing during the COVIDcrisis, but this week, that same framework seems to emphasize the distance between here and there, the dichotomous feeling of at once wanting to rush in and help and feeling grateful to be out of harm’s way. But even from afar, we may find inspiration and empathy in literature that stares these disasters in the face, marks their dimensions with incisiveness and artfulness, and, sometimes, even imagines a way forward.” —Emily Nemens, Editor
Saturday marked the fifteenth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Claudia Rankine discusses writing in response to the disaster in her Art of Poetry interview.
“They Called Her the Witch,” excerpted from Melchor’s Hurricane Season, explains the trauma of the land on which the Witch lives and grows her poisonous herbs: “They lost everything, right down to the stones of their temples, which ended up buried in the mountainside in the hurricane of ’78, after the landslide, after the avalanche of mud that swamped more than a hundred locals from La Matosa.”
It’s a torrential rain that opens Denis Johnson’s “Car-Crash while Hitchhiking”: “The downpour raked the asphalt and gurgled in the ruts … My jaw ached. I knew every raindrop by its name.”
The protagonist of Shruti Swamy’s “A House Is a Body” first notices “not the scent of the smoke, but the sight of it, not the sight itself, but the screen through which it altered the sunlight.”
“It is because my husband is from the midwest / that he dreams of twisters,” writes Karen Fish in “The Dreams.”
Whiteout snow comes for Alice and her husband in Willa C. Richards’s “Failure to Thrive”—a story that was just republished in Best Debut Short Stories 2020.
In “Diary of a Fire Lookout,” Philip Connors describes the history of forest fire: “An ancient juniper from the heart of the Gila shows that fire burned around it, on average, every seven years; fire helped it thrive. Ponderosa covered much of the forest in open parkland with trees forty to sixty feet apart, surrounded by grass. Then, in the nineteenth century, the cow arrived.”
In “Storm and After,” Alexander Craig describes the chaos of a storm and the subsequent daybreak, “glistening and slate-gray.”
To support people recovering from natural disasters, please consider making a donation to the American Red Cross.
Sign up here to receive a fresh installment of The Art of Distance in your inbox every Monday.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Time to Unite
2025-06-26 12:49The 'hurt me' meme is the newest way to confront your deepest fears
2025-06-26 11:37Paul Manafort guilty: The internet reacts with a satisfied smirk
2025-06-26 10:40Against Fear
2025-06-26 10:14Popular Posts
Astronomers saw one galaxy impale another. The damage was an eye
2025-06-26 12:23Scientists may have found a way to create universal blood
2025-06-26 10:41Featured Posts
The Sound and the “Furious”
2025-06-26 12:45Police radio and ambient music is an oddly calming combination
2025-06-26 12:04Security guard loses his job after going viral for farting at work
2025-06-26 10:38Elon Musk buys Twitter
2025-06-26 10:27Better Buy: Previous
2025-06-26 10:18Popular Articles
Meta Store retail workers will be 'vendors,' not Meta employees
2025-06-26 11:28Iguana photobombs woman's picture in the best possible way
2025-06-26 11:11Simulation report: Elon Musk unfollowed Grimes on Twitter
2025-06-26 10:58Against Fear
2025-06-26 10:52Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (994)
Co-creation Information Network
The State of 5G: When It's Coming, How Fast It Will Be & The Sci
2025-06-26 12:47Opportunity Information Network
How to mute or unmute an account on Instagram
2025-06-26 12:01Prosperous Times Information Network
Nicki Minaj blamed a baby for her album sales, and Twitter thinks it's hilarious
2025-06-26 11:40Impression Information Network
The dramatic new cover of 'Time' shows Trump 'in deep'
2025-06-26 10:21Sharing Information Network
Turtle Beach Recon 50P gaming headset deal: 28% off
2025-06-26 10:11