
Reader Score
75%
75% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 7 reviews on

"Dunn's pieces have an almost irrepressible kinetic energy." --Alexandra Kleeman, The New York Times
A previously unpublished collection of stories about motherhood, violence, and desire, from the cult icon Katherine Dunn, the author of Geek Love.
"[Dunn's] collection is a welcome reminder that literature can be not only a showcase for polished, refined sentiment but also an arena in which both reader and writer grapple--with imminent challenges, with their own psyches, with the uncertainty of survival . . . Dunn's pieces have an almost irrepressible kinetic energy." --Alexandra Kleeman, The New York Times
"Violent, sensual, and at times delightfully off-putting . . . Dunn's provocative and unflinching commitment to black-humor in the face of the taboo is on full display in Near Flesh; this collection is unafraid to be nasty in ways that we don't often get to see anymore." --Mike Welch, Chicago Review of Books "These 19 pieces . . . capture many of the curiosities, domestic anxieties and derangements that Dunn explored in her other work, often with pitch-black humor. Her characters stick with you: a woman who plans to have sex with robots, a troubled teenager who dreams of meeting aliens, a college student who has a thoroughly disappointing affair with an older poet. Prepare to be unsettled." --The New York Times