Baby Geisha

Fiction & Literature, Short Stories
Cover of the book Baby Geisha by Trinie Dalton, Two Dollar Radio
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Trinie Dalton ISBN: 9780983247142
Publisher: Two Dollar Radio Publication: January 16, 2012
Imprint: Two Dollar Radio Language: English
Author: Trinie Dalton
ISBN: 9780983247142
Publisher: Two Dollar Radio
Publication: January 16, 2012
Imprint: Two Dollar Radio
Language: English

"Half ingenuous and half wily, winningly hard to pin down. The result is a kind of everyday fantastic. Dalton nails the Walserian trick of evincing a sincerity nearly indistinguishable from irony. The effect is a poised instability, more uncanny than the magic the stories sometimes describe."
-Bookforum

"Dalton handles her narratives with a deft skill and a keen, distinct, confident voice that never eases up, never ceases to surprise, leaving readers happy to experience her intriguing world up close. Just the way we like it."
-Brooklyn Rail

"[The stories] feel like brilliant sexual fairy tales on drugs. Dalton writes of self-discovery and sex with a knowing humility and humor."
-Interview Magazine

"'Pura Vida,' about an emotionally unavailable journalist on assignment to cover a sloth clinic in Costa Rica, is a standout, its final moment between woman and sloth arriving with breathtaking lightness, like the first flower of spring. Other memorable outings include trips to the Missouri Ozarks ("Wet Look"), the Alps ("Shrub of Emotion"), and the Painted Desert ("Baby Geisha"), with men and women on the verge of, but never quite reaching, psycho-sexual breakthroughs."
-Los Angeles Magazine Critic's Pick

"[Baby Geisha] pokes fun, it's satirical, there's an underlying delicious irony to it, and the telling parts are the ones where Dalton coins names, cuts down trees with her paragraphs, gives us just a touch of the absurd... Dalton's skill as a writer, and above all her expertise in choosing words that play into a darker cultural picture--an offsetting of America's natural high!--are not to be missed here."
-Fanzine


Baby Geisha is a collection of thirteen sexually-charged stories that roam from the Coney Island Ferris wheel to the Greek Isles.

True to Trinie Dalton's form, the stories in Baby Geisha are distinctly imagined while also representing a more grounded approach in the author's style. There's the Joan Didion-obsessed starving journalist of "Pura Vida," struggling to maintain a relationship with her performance artist sisters (or anyone, for that matter), on assignment in Costa Rica to write an article on sloth-hugging. "Millennium Chill" is about a woman who discovers that her body heat is mysteriously linked to that of an elderly beggar.

Baby Geisha serves to support Dalton's reputation as a remarkable stylist and a very original artist.


View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

"Half ingenuous and half wily, winningly hard to pin down. The result is a kind of everyday fantastic. Dalton nails the Walserian trick of evincing a sincerity nearly indistinguishable from irony. The effect is a poised instability, more uncanny than the magic the stories sometimes describe."
-Bookforum

"Dalton handles her narratives with a deft skill and a keen, distinct, confident voice that never eases up, never ceases to surprise, leaving readers happy to experience her intriguing world up close. Just the way we like it."
-Brooklyn Rail

"[The stories] feel like brilliant sexual fairy tales on drugs. Dalton writes of self-discovery and sex with a knowing humility and humor."
-Interview Magazine

"'Pura Vida,' about an emotionally unavailable journalist on assignment to cover a sloth clinic in Costa Rica, is a standout, its final moment between woman and sloth arriving with breathtaking lightness, like the first flower of spring. Other memorable outings include trips to the Missouri Ozarks ("Wet Look"), the Alps ("Shrub of Emotion"), and the Painted Desert ("Baby Geisha"), with men and women on the verge of, but never quite reaching, psycho-sexual breakthroughs."
-Los Angeles Magazine Critic's Pick

"[Baby Geisha] pokes fun, it's satirical, there's an underlying delicious irony to it, and the telling parts are the ones where Dalton coins names, cuts down trees with her paragraphs, gives us just a touch of the absurd... Dalton's skill as a writer, and above all her expertise in choosing words that play into a darker cultural picture--an offsetting of America's natural high!--are not to be missed here."
-Fanzine


Baby Geisha is a collection of thirteen sexually-charged stories that roam from the Coney Island Ferris wheel to the Greek Isles.

True to Trinie Dalton's form, the stories in Baby Geisha are distinctly imagined while also representing a more grounded approach in the author's style. There's the Joan Didion-obsessed starving journalist of "Pura Vida," struggling to maintain a relationship with her performance artist sisters (or anyone, for that matter), on assignment in Costa Rica to write an article on sloth-hugging. "Millennium Chill" is about a woman who discovers that her body heat is mysteriously linked to that of an elderly beggar.

Baby Geisha serves to support Dalton's reputation as a remarkable stylist and a very original artist.


More books from Two Dollar Radio

Cover of the book The Other Side of the World by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book The Vine That Ate the South by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book Triangulum by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book Found Audio by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book The Word for Woman Is Wilderness by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book Sirens by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book Square Wave by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book Seeing People Off by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book How To Get Into the Twin Palms by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book You Are My Heart and Other Stories by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book Radio Iris by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book The Correspondence Artist by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book Crapalachia by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book I'm Trying to Reach You by Trinie Dalton
Cover of the book Damascus by Trinie Dalton
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy