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| photo: Chris Galloway |
Rebecca Brown is the author of more than a dozen books, including a 1994 novel set during the AIDS crisis called The Gifts of the Body, and a 2021 book of essays about artists and the seasons called You Tell the Stories You Need to Believe. Obscure Destinies (Pilot Editions, November 11, 2025), the 17th book in the Fellow Travelers Series, gathers four distinct forms--a story, a memoir, a play, and an essay--to bear on how the living cope with the dying of people they love. Brown's new memoir, My Animal Kingdom (FrizzLit Editions, December 6, 2025), tells her life story through her relationships with wild and domesticated animals.
Handsell readers your book in 25 words or less:
I rescued a squirrel my cat dragged in, and it changed my life. My Animal Kingdom tells that story. Plus my friendships with cats, otters, birds, monkeys.
On your nightstand now:
Mice 1961 by Stacey Levine, Broken Utopia by Ryan Boudinot, and Nobuko by Trisha Ready, three books by Seattle friends, each fantastic in their own way--formally inventive but in a sensible way, not in a look-how-weird-I-can-be way, and emotionally resonant and moving. Great stuff.
Favorite book when you were a child:
Rascal by Sterling North, a book about a raccoon that befriends a family.
Your top five authors:
Franz Kafka, Virginia Woolf, Samuel Beckett, Julian of Norwich, Gertrude Stein (mostly the prose, though). Can I please have one more? Willa Cather. I mean two or three more... Mary Shelley, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville.
Book you've faked reading:
James Joyce's Ulysses. I don't know that I have ever said, "I read this book," but I have nodded along knowingly when others discussed it in college. I didn't even try to get near Finnegans Wake. Though I love Dubliners.
Book you're an evangelist for:
William Goyen, The House of Breath. He was from the East Piney Woods in Texas and an amazing stylist. Sometimes almost incantatory and sometimes wonderfully beautifully bizarrely otherworldly. Like with strange human-angel creatures arising from fields and houses talking to their story. Also, stories about chickens.
Book you've bought for the cover:
Kathryn Davis, The Girl Who Trod on a Loaf, and it turned out to be a magnificent book, and now Davis is one of the contemporary writers I admire most. Her prose is incredible, her sense of being between worlds, her strange compelling characters. A truly great American writer.
Book you hid from your parents:
Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask) by David Reuben. Maybe I actually didn't hide it from my parents, as I read it with my neighbor from a few houses down the street, Susan Robinson, at her house, secretly from both our parents, as we tried to figure out what sex was all about. I think we were in seventh grade? Shortly thereafter she got a nice boyfriend. I did not.
Book that changed your life:
Shakespeare's King Lear. I went into reading it a fundamentalist Christian and came out of it... no longer a fundamentalist.
Favorite line from a book:
"I can't go on, I'll go on." --Beckett, The Unnamable
Five books you'll never part with:
Woolf, To the Lighthouse
Beckett, Waiting for Godot
Stein, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas
Kafka's Collected Works
Shelley, Frankenstein.
Book you most want to read again for the first time:
Marilynne Robinson, Housekeeping.
Anything you would like to add:
Can I say how much I love Melville and the Beatles and Built to Spill and this band I just started listening to from the Sahara called Terakaft. Amazing. Also, Japanese pop from the '60s. How pop music, classical, and jazz too, I guess, are things I have "read" or at least they have made my thinking and feeling and being as much as books have. I can't imagine how I would have approached reading deeply without having listened deeply, read the old liner notes to album when I was a teen and preteen, how I loved and studied what the music and words did, and the artists who made the music, how alive they were.