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I Love Dick Paperback – 22 June 2016

3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 889 ratings

The cult novel adored by feminists and fashionistas alike, now in paperback.

When Chris Kraus, an unsuccessful artist pushing 40, spends an evening with a rogue academic named Dick, she falls madly and inexplicably in love, enlisting her husband in her haunted pursuit. Dick proposes a kind of game between them, but when he fails to answer their letters Chris continues alone, transforming an adolescent infatuation into a new form of philosophy.
Blurring the lines of fiction, essay and memoir, Chris Kraus's novel was a literary sensation when it was first published in 1997. Widely considered to be the most important feminist novel of the past two decades,
I Love Dick is still essential reading; as relevant, fierce and funny as ever.
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Review

I know there was a time before I read Chris Kraus's I Love Dick (in fact, that time was only five years ago), but it's hard to imagine; some works of art do this to you. They tear down so many assumptions about what the form can handle (in this case, what the form of the novel can handle) that there is no way to re-create your mind before your encounter with them -- Sheila Heti

The intelligence and honesty and total originality of Chris Kraus make her work not just great but indispensable - especially now, when everything is so confusing, so full of despair. I read everything Chris Kraus writes; she softens despair with her brightness, and with incredible humor, too. -- Rachel Kushner

I Love Dick is a classic. Here pain is the aphrodisiac and distance is the muse. Unrequited love is transformed into a fascinating book of ideas. -- Zoe Pilger

Ever since I read I Love Dick, I have revered it as one of the most explosive, revealing, lacerating and unusual memoirs ever committed to the page ... I Love Dick is never a comfortable read, and it is by turns exasperating, horrifying, and lurid, but it is never less than genuine, and often completely illuminating about the life of the mind. -- Rick Moody

I Love Dick is written in a clear prose capable of theoretical clarity, descriptive delicacy, articulate rage and melancholic longing ―
White Review

Tart, brazen and funny ... a cautionary tale, I Love Dick raises disturbing but compelling questions about female social behavior, power, control ―
Nation

For years before I read it, I kept hearing about Chris Kraus's I Love Dick. I mainly heard about it from smart women who liked to talk about their feelings ... I didn't understand exactly what it was, but it had an allure, like whispers about a dance club that only opened under the full moon, or an underground bar you needed a password to get into ... then I read it. I was nearly two decades late to the party - I Love Dick came out in 1997 - but I loved the party anyway. I was finally part of it, and it made me feel even more part of it - part of something ... I was holding white-hot text in my hands -- Leslie Jamison ―
New Yorker

I Love Dick is one of the most important books about being a woman ... Friends speak of Kraus's work in the same breathless and conspiratorial way they discuss Elena Ferrante's novels of female friendship set in Naples. The clandestine clubbishness that envelopes women who've read and immersed themselves in the texts shows how little female desire, anger and vulnerability is accurately and confidently explored in literature and culture ... the book reveals far deeper truths than standard and uncomplicated love plots tend to. -- Dawn Foster ―
Independent

This is the most important book written about men and women written in the last century... why is this revolutionary 18-year-old book finding its biggest audience only now? The answer lies in its own pages, when Kraus writes that "who gets to speak, and why, is the only question". In the last half a decade, women have been permitted to speak in a different way than before; women artists who use details of their own lives in their work are not as easily dismissed as they once were. The internet enables hordes of frightened, anonymous men to try to silence women via harassment and shaming, but it has also enabled our voices to be heard on a grander scale, with fewer intermediaries, than ever before. We are able to write our own letters to Dick now, and to publish them widely: to tell Dick exactly what we think of him, whether he likes it or not.This book will only become more relevant. Its time is now - and now, and now, for the rest of eternity. -- Emily Gould ―
Guardian

This book comes with a reputation, though it's not the one you might expect from the title, which leaps from the gorgeous, faux-innocent cover. Chris Kraus's "novel" was first published in the US in 1997 and has become recognised as both an influential feminist text and a key intervention in the debate over where life-writing ends and fiction begins ... What remains so brilliant about the book is the real, useful thought that Kraus builds out of her romantic fantasy ... You can call it a novel, then, but it's as a philosophical and cultural critique that I Love Dick bites hardest. -- Jonathan Gibbs ―
Independent

Read this on the bus - we dare you ―
Sunday Times Style

One of the most important feminist novels of the past two decades - -- Eva Wiseman ―
Observer Magazine

A joyful riposte to all those stories in which clever women fall victim to the pressures of convention - from The Yellow Wallpaper to The Bell Jar and beyond - and also to the countless books by men in which women are crushed by romantic encounters: from Madame Bovary to Anna Karenina to Laclos's epistolatory Les Liaisons Dangereuses and André Breton's autofiction, Nadja ... What makes now the right moment to publish Kraus's debut novel for the first time in the UK, after 18 years? There is a hint of retrospective gratitude: without Kraus, we might not have had the philosophers in high heels of Zoe Pilger's Eat My Heart Out, or Susana Medina's Philosophical Toys. Without her challenge to what she called "the 'serious' contemporary hetero-male novel ... a thinly veiled Story of Me", Sheila Heti might never have asked How Should a Person Be?, and Ben Lerner might never have written Leaving the Atocha Station. A whole generation of writers owes her ... You can get high on the book's passion, its humour, on the creation of a still-fresh style that not only says new things about female experience, but is able simultaneously to comment, tongue-in-cheek, on how this experience has been written, filmed and made into art. Kraus writes with an elegance that includes enough rough edges to make I Love Dick a game for real. - -- Joanna Walsh ―
Guardian

A literary must-have accessory, a relentlessly clever-clever book at fits neatly into the radical space recently opened up by semi-autobiographical novelists such as Nell Zink and Elena Ferrante ... It has some hugely arresting things to say about women's relationships with creative self-determination. -- Claire Allfree ―
Metro

The skill of the book allows the reader to enter into the fantasy (the one sex scene is torturous, but hot) while knowing it's destructive and one-sided. Chris recognises how vulnerable - ridiculous even - infatuation has made her. But she glories in the surrender ... This is a brilliant, experimental rollercoaster of a book ... there's something radical about a woman who pushes herself to the edge, finally to recover. -- Liz Hoggard ―
Observer

Genre-defying and dare I say it seminal ... It has possibly even more to tell us now than it did on first publication - or perhaps we're just more ready to hear it ... I Love Dick is one of the most important books about the limited ways in which women are permitted to speak. -- Lauren Elkin ―
TLS

I Love Dick is a wonderful catalogue of contradiction and desire, which benefits from the flexible and imaginative excess of its starting point: infatuation. It's also extremely funny and frantically absorbing. -- Anakana Schofield ―
Irish Times

A formidable novel of ideas ―
New Statesman

As important as Mrs Dalloway or The Bell Jar ―
Elle

What I Love Dick is really about is chaotic female sexuality and the ethics of using your life in your work ... it is soaked in feminist rage -- Hadley Freeman ―
Guardian Published On: 2017-05-22

About the Author

Chris Kraus is the author of the novels Aliens and Anorexia, I Love Dick and Summer of Hate as well as Video Green- Los Angeles Art and the Triumph of Nothingness and Where Art Belongs. A Professor of Writing at the European Graduate School, she writes for various magazines and lives in Los Angeles.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 1781256489
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Serpents Tail; 1st edition (22 June 2016)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 288 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9781781256480
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1781256480
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 12.8 x 2.2 x 19.6 cm
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 889 ratings

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Small Canadian shopper
5.0 out of 5 stars Even better than the show
Reviewed in Canada on 5 January 2024
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I watched the show on Amazon Prime and found it interesting. When I found out it was based on a book ( anovel but based on a true story) I had to read it. It is fascinating. It is interesting to read a novel that is in epistolary (sp?) form - a series of letters.
And it arrived less than 24 hours after I ordered it. It must have been on the shelf in the local amazon warehouse!
art
5.0 out of 5 stars Captivating and Thought Provoking
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 4 October 2023
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Right from the start, this book has been a whirlwind of raw, unpretty, nondigestable emotion. It was not meant to be pretty, or liked, or to pander; it simply is, without care of opinion or what it “should” be, and that is breathtaking to me. It made me rethink things about myself and my relationships, and my ideas of relationships as I read it, and that was lovely, and hard.
Ann de Mot
5.0 out of 5 stars And I love this book!
Reviewed in the United States on 16 September 2018
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The story of the re-emergence of this book is fascinating.First published in the 1990s and consigned to absolute obscurity ever since, it has suddenly turned up on best-seller lists, the author is being interviewed everywhere, it's a phenomenon. This is a story about real people and real relationships from a torrid era when things were still fluid, uncertain, when young women thought they could be filmmakers and writers, when great cities still had zones and places where creative types could live cheaply, when everyone travelled around the world and stayed in each other's apartments in London, Athens, New York, Sydney, wherever ... The author, Chris Kraus, grew up in New Zealand which gives her tale a particular poignancy. You can't help thinking she is a bit of a provincial wanne-be, who links up with a really famous intellectual who actually doesn't do anything himself - he doesn't write, he doesn't paint, but he introduces people to each other and runs an incredibly influential publishing house and an in-group intellectual magazine which everyone in the eighties knew and respected and which is unbelievably still going today. Semiotext(e) was such a key reference in the postmodern Franco-Anglo intellectual scene. Well, anyway, Chris Kraus after failing as a filmmaker (although she kept on trying) hooked up with that same intellectual, Sylvere Lotringer, many years older than her, married him, and then realised she wanted more of a real man and fell in love with Dick, who is a famous English intellectual renowned for key sociological and cultural texts, who is still around today teaching in Southern California, and Chris started sending him hundreds of messages and faxes explaining to him in detail why she loved him so much and made him have a sexual encounter with her - just once, it seems - by simple force of email and strangely enough her husband didn't mind and maybe he wanted to get in on the act himself. He loved Dick too! Wait! Stop! Who are these people? Do they actually exist? Does anyone care today? Well, yes, they do, its twenty or thirty years later and suddenly Chris Kraus's book is republished and so are her earlier books and there you go, she has also authored a biography of Kathy Acker and wow! Kathy Acker, dead at fifty of breast cancer, is now a postergirl for displaced feminist intellectuals and all her books are being republished and really it is all a whirlwind, and then Amazon Prime made a movie about I Love Dick starring Kevin Bacon as Dick and the whole thing really took off.... So, are you still with me? Probably not and I wouldn't blame you. People who want to read clear narratives with plot and character and exciting romances where for instance private investigators turn out to be Meercats will not much like Chris Kraus's books, this or any of them, but if you can stand being on a kind of nostalgic whirlwind back to the glorious 80s and 90s with all the theory and criticisms and self-delusion (which Kraus captures brilliantly, she doesn't spare herself at all) you'll be carried away. And the prose! Such a great change to read this kind of writing, no editor has ever got to it with a set of instructions about sentences or subordinate clauses. Great fun! I read her other books straight away too, I did like Torpor especially which is a kind of prequel and I've just finished the Kathy Acker bio which raises many other issues for another time. Go for it, but read the Look Inside first and if you don't like it, don't bother, but don't make others feel bad about enjoying it. We all deserve our own escapes
30 people found this helpful
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Alysson Oliveira
5.0 out of 5 stars “Não foi Lukács quem disse isso primeiro?”, ou a tentativa de uma resenha pós-moderna
Reviewed in Brazil on 20 June 2017
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Publicado em 1997, I LOVE DICK, da norte-americana Chris Kraus, é “clássico feminista cult”(Emily Gould, The Guardian) cuja trama combina romance (o gênero literário) com teoria e crítica cultural e mais um pouco, resultando num instigante retrato pós-moderna do romance (relações amorosas entre duas ou mais pessoas). A autora é também uma cineasta experimental, o que talvez ressalte uma espécie de potencia imagética de sua narrativa, que traz tintas teóricas – Baudrillard, Deleuze, Guattari & cia (para quem tem paciência com eles pode ser pura diversão, ou não).

A “trama” envolve uma personagem chamada Chris Kraus, casada com um professor francês (radicado nos EUA), chamado Sylvere Lotringer. A verdadeira autora realmente foi casada com esse professor de filosofia, na época em que escreveu o livro, que “combina ficção e memória [...] para explorar a obsessão psicossexual da autora com [um sujeito] chamado Dick” (Wikipedia). Em português, obviamente, perde-se o trocadilho com o nome do personagem e a gíria do inglês. Dick (o personagem) é inspirado no teórico e sociólogo inglês Dick Hebdige, que tentou inclusive proibir a publicação do livro – embora ele não seja nominalmente citado.

Depois de um jantar na casa do personagem Dick, Chris e Sylvere, no final de 1994, são obrigados a passar a noite lá, diante da ameaça de uma nevasca. No dia seguinte, já em sua casa, Chris se diz apaixonada por Dick, e ela e o marido, ciente dessa paixonite (seria?), começam a escrever cartas para Dick, que, quando é informado, fica descontável – obviamente.

O livro é um romance epistolar – tal qual As Relações Perigosas – e quando Chris comenta isso com uma amiga, esta responde. “Não foi Habermas que uma vez disse que o gênero epistolar marcou o advento do romance [gênero literário] burguês?”. Chris foi, obvia e tristemente, intelectualmente humilhada – mas não deixa de pensar: “Não foi Lukács quem disse isso primeiro?”. Pensa mas não fala.

O que Chris parece falar, no entanto, ao longo de I LOVE DICK, é que nossa tudo já foi dito – em matéria de amor, teoria, cultura, filosofia. Só nos restam paródias, pastiches e paráfrases. De qualquer forma, o livro é “não apenas grande, mas também indispensável” (Rachel Kushner), e uma tremenda influencia até hoje. “Você pode chama-lo de romance, porém, é como crítica cultural e filosófica que I love Dick morde com mais força” (Jonathan Gibbs, Independent).

I LOVE DICK, que foi adaptado para uma série disponível na Amazon, não requer prática, nem tampouco conhecimento de filosofia e/ou crítica cultural – embora possa conhecer o básico possa trazer uma nova camada de compreensão/diversão – para apreciar sua exploração dos desejos e equívocos dos relacionamentos humanos.
3 people found this helpful
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Jutta Renner
5.0 out of 5 stars Das Kultbuch ohne Blatt vor dem Mund
Reviewed in Germany on 19 January 2019
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Das Kultbuch! Herrlich lustig und Herzerfrischend.