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Rachel Khong, author of Goodbye, Vitamin and Real Americans, is back with a new short story collection, My Dear You, out today from Knopf. Below, she discusses three of the books that influenced her work.
The Girl in The Flammable Skirt by Aimee Bender: I stumbled across the work of Aimee Bender for the first time about 20 years ago now, and found the trajectory of my writing changed. I count myself among the generation of writers that owe their work to her. I grew up loving fairy tales and fantastical myths; numerous English classes suggested that only realism and Serious Topics were valuable and important. But Aimeeâs work suggested otherwise: that magic and pleasure and strangeness could be just as valuable, and could illuminate human emotion just as deeply.
Self-Portrait with Ghost by Meng Jin: Meng is my friend, and this book really captures what I admire about her as a writer and a person: it contains a hunger for life itself, and deep curiosity. Some of the stories are magical, others are more realist, all are really sharp, propulsive, exciting, delicious. I see the world a little differently after I read work by Meng. If you havenât read any of her work, this collection would be a wonderful introduction to it. Â
The Largesse of the Sea Maiden by Denis Johnson: What I value in some of my favorite writers is what Iâll call âprecise randomness.â Words and sentences that feel surprising, yet perfectly chosenâthat startle you awake. The writing of Denis Johnson embodies this for me, particularly his stories and his poems. This posthumous story collection made me cry. I had the chance to meet Denis at his home in Idaho because my husband, Eli, had been his editor and friend. The human being behind the art was generous and hilarious; he was the opposite of entitled, grateful to be alive, given another chance.
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