Synopses & Reviews
Fiction. Pamela Lu's PAMELA: A NOVEL rocks. Pamela Lu manages to explore, critique, and worry about identity, shopping malls, orange dresses, location, self-expression, communication and the future with glorious intelligence and laugh-out-loud humor, in the context of exquisitely wrought (and very long) sentences. One suspects that, like the character YJ, Lu was always living and writing against a blind wall of cacophony that existed somewhere between plain sense and the din of cultural expectation and popular music. The book, as well as its characters, thus occupies the contemporary position of always being foreign to herself, a private predicament which necessarily played itself out on the public level, in the politics of making a literature that struggled to catch sight of itself, as if that could provide some assurance of its existence. We were using a borrowed language to add more words to our names... Where do we draw the line between fiction and autobiography? Frankly, when reading PAM
Synopsis
Fiction. "While the new sentence—the prose wing of Language writing—strips narrative down to pointed sets of shifting referents, Lu, in her debut, knowingly resuscitates it, creating a precise and humorous elegy to the self, and to its self-subversions. This quasi-bildungsroman charts the emergence of an 'I' (not 'P' and not 'Pamela,' though the three characters do appear together) into a 20-something Bay Area, with memories of a suburban childhood close on her heels.... This is a book of extraordinary philosophical subtlety and clarity, one that manages to tell a beautiful story in spite of itself"—Publishers Weekly.
About the Author
Pamela Lu was born in Southern California and studied mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley. Since 1995 she has worked as a technical writer in Silicon Valley and co-edited Idiom, an online journal and chapbook press. In addition to a work of part fiction and part earnet mockumentary, AMBIENT PARKING LOT (Kenning Editions, 2011), a book of fanciful nonfiction, PAMELA: A NOVEL (Atelos, 1999), she has had prose and poetry published in a number of journals, including CHAIN, Chicago Review, Clamour, Explosive Magazine, Interlope, Mirage, Fascicle, and Poetics Journal, and in the anthologies BAY POETICS and BITING THE ERROR. Lu lives in San Francisco.