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Print, radio, and online campaignSocial Media CampaignPromotion on e-newsletterInterview on Nightboat BlogSimultaneous print and e-book releaseLaunch eventEmail for more information
A revelatory novel (or parable) of art, adventure, and a radical politics, set in a world on the precipice.
A philosophical fable,Crocosmiacenters on Maya as she recollects the "great turning"-a moment of radical social and ecological change effected by her mother, Jane's, art. As Maya recalls her upbringing-from a commune run by anarchist nuns to a time of rural isolation before her mother's disappearance-Mellis's prose gorgeously conjures a life defined by revolutionary thought and action and the interplay and tension between family life and political commitment. At once a fantasy, a handbook to political thought, and a work of eco-fiction, this lush novel meditates on how, in a world on the precipice, dreams of communal care can bloom.
"A novel of revolutionary transition that achieves the impossible: not only charting the transformation of the mechanics of society, but the liberation of consciousness itself. Sentence by sentence, and in the impossible and enthralling architectures of each page, Miranda Mellis's Crocosmia is a treasure."
—Jordy Rosenberg
"I read Crocosmia hungrily, in a stretch of “stolen” hours, feeling both held and fueled by its articulations of complex political desire confronting the lack—so named by Lauren Berlant—of “genres for transition.” This utter gift of a book is soaked in intelligence, beauty, resistance, and loss; its blood is what spills when theory meets practice, its references help it breathe. Meanwhile, its sentences—like its characters—grow the genre they need."
—Anna Moschovakis
"Imagine: a burning, flooding, warring planet where someone has kept their notebook open. They’ve been collecting ancient and natural recipes for revenge, written on mysterious linen woven of complex kinship, research, mythopoetics, collective action and love. If you've been fearing what follows if we survive the damage we humans have produced in our home, bury your phone in the compost for a week and read Crocosmia slowly: it will rearrange your heart and change your life."
Miranda Mellis is the author of Demystifications (2021); The Instead; The Spokes (2012); None of This Is Real (2012); The Revisionist (2007). She has been an artist-in-residence at the Headlands Center for the Arts, the Vermont Studio Center, and Millay Colony. She received the John Hawkes Prize in Fiction, the Michael S. Harper Praxis Prize, and a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. She grew up in San Francisco and now lives in Olympia, Washington.
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