Katie Kitamura's most recent novel, A Separation, was a finalist for the Premio Gregor von Rezzori and a New York Times Notable Book. It was named a best book of the year by over a dozen publications and translated into sixteen languages, and is being adapted for film. Her two previous novels, Gone to the Forest and The Longshot, were both finalists for the New York Public Library's Young Lions Fiction Award. A recipient of fellowships from the Lannan Foundation and Santa Maddalena Foundation, Katie has written for publications including The New York Times, The Guardian, Granta, BOMB Magazine, Triple Canopy, and Frieze. She teaches in the creative writing program at New York University.
Praise for Intimacies
“[C]ooly written and casts a spell… One of Kitamura’s gifts… is to
inject every scene with a pinprick of dread…. One of the best
novels I’ve read in 2021… A taut, moody novel that moves
purposefully between worlds.” —Dwight Garner, New York Times
“[I]ntense, unsettling… Intimacies is very much a story that seems
to be something familiar but soon morphs into something
disorientingly strange…. [W]ith her Jamesian attention to the
slightest movement of bodies and words, Kitamura keeps Intimacies
rooted to the ordinary domestic experiences of her narrator, her
petty jealousies, her passing suspicions. The effect is a kind of
emotional intensity that’s gripping because it feels increasingly
unsustainable. Who could endure that raw-nerve sensitivity to the
power of language to love, to deceive, to promise, to kill?
Kitamura pulls us through a rising panic of hyper-awareness until
the story’s fever finally breaks with a note of hope and relief.
But that can’t quell the novel’s reverberations, which expose
something incomprehensible about the moral dimensions of modern
life." —Ron Charles, Washington Post
"Intimacies is both sleekly gorgeous — those sentences — and
psychologically unnerving. She’s an absolutely brilliant writer."
—Julie Otsuka, New York Times Book Review
"A master of cool disquiet... Kitamura writes with forceful,
direct prose that makes for a bracing read and leaves the reader
mesmerized." —Lauren Mechling, Vogue
"[A] thriller of a novel.... In exploring how one’s proximity to
power and violence can hold endless repercussions, Kitamura
interrogates how our intimacies can change the course of our
lives.” —Time
"Kitamura’s prose elegantly breaks grammatical convention… this
style mirrors the book’s concern with the bleeding lines between
intimacies — especially between the sincere and the coercive —
while Kitamura’s immense talent smooths the seams…. A novel like
this one offers the reader much to work with, raising a chorus of
harmonic questions rather than squealing a single answer.
Contemporary American novels too often deliver pre-solved moral
quandaries and obvious enemies in service to our cultural craving
for ethical perfection — the correct word, the right behavior, the
sole and righteous position on myriad complex issues. Kitamura
works outside of this trendy literality by knowing, as the best
writers do, that a story’s apparent subject does not determine its
conceptual limits; plot summary would do this book no justice….
Kitamura’s work also contains a keen understanding of human
behavior, one that reaches far beyond the pages of this brief and
arresting book; she travels to places that ordinary writers cannot
go." —Catherine Lacey, The New York Times Book Review
"Calling all Rachel Cuskheads and W.G. Sebald stans! Kitamura is a
novelist of enchanting imagination and minimalist prose style....
The novel’s plot twists are of the subtle, jaw-tightening variety
rather than the dramatic, stomach-knotting sort, but it’s still
fair to call it a ‘psychological thriller.’ Intimacies is for those
who like their addictive novels to sneak up behind them rather than
slap them in the face.” —Molly Young, Vulture
"[A] gorgeous, destabilizing meditation on the power
differentials built into language and the gradual distortions of
our emotional allegiances.” —Raven Leilani, Vulture
"An amazing book, beautiful and captivating’" —Elif Shafak
"In spare and elegant prose, Kitamura limns her unnamed
protagonist's search for home and gifts us a powerful,
beautiful book." —Chika Unigwe
“I love how Katie Kitamura can channel a mind.” —Ruth Ozeki,
Observer UK, Best Books of the Year)
“With Intimacies, Kitamura gives the question of how to voice
someone else’s suffering a political urgency of the highest order.”
—Jennifer Wilson, The New Republic
“The way I tore through this book like it was a sexy beach read
instead of a piercing meditation on the way language moderates our
perception of violence! . . . About once every two pages,
Kitamura writes a phrase that feels like a key turning inside your
body. And if all of this doesn’t sound
immobilize-you-on-your-couch-turning-pages-level good, just know
that Barack Obama named it one of his favorite books of the year."
—Jenny Singer, Glamour
“Powerful, masterful…. One might call Kitamura one of the most
talented thriller writers who doesn’t write thrillers, for her
novels are tinged with menace and threat and dark alleys that seem
primed for acts of violence. And yet, really, the artistry .
. . . lies in the delicate ways in which characters continue
on, persevere slightly better or slightly worse, and survive.”
—Chris Bollen, Interview Magazine
“Just under 250 pages but packs a powerful punch. Beautifully
written and mysterious.” —Real Simple
“[T]he book vibrates with tension. . . Kitamura’s prose is
responsible for this effect — she writes like a concert violinist,
with clarity and control and a sustained, uneasy high pitch.”
—Steph Cha, Los Angeles Times
“Kitamura blends the personal and political in spare, elegant,
inimitable prose. A standout novel, like nothing I’ve read before."
—Kathryn Ma, San Francisco Chronicle
“Katie Kitamura’s fourth novel spins a taut web of dread from the
start. . . In cool, spare prose, Kitamura asks the book’s animating
query: How should you go about your little life in a world where
horrible things are happening?” —Stephanie Hayes, The Atlantic
"Fans of sparse millennial tales: Run, don't walk.” —Entertainment
Weekly
“In her unforgettable 2017 A Separation, Kitamura took her
protagonist to the edge of an island in the Mediterranean; in her
new and equally unforgettable novel, she places an interpreter in
the middle of The Hague. This woman is also embroiled in many
dramas, personal and professional, forcing her to choose a path and
an identity.” —Bethanne Patrick, Washington Post
“Kitamura’s voice is chilly but also brave as she strikes a pose
between mind and heart. Her searing new novel, Intimacies is, in
key ways, a companion piece to A Separation, revisiting themes of
duplicity and questionable morality; but it also delves into
politics and sexual tension more explicitly, a tale that burns like
dry ice . . . In crystalline prose, Kitamura probes the labyrinths
of language and the riddles of our humanity . . . Intimacies is a
judicious, cerebral novel, but Kitamura seasons it with dashes of
glamor. There’s a hint of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Daisy and Tom
Buchanan, “careless people [who] smashed up things and creatures
and then retreated back into their money.” . . . This slim,
graceful novel punches above its weight as Kitamura explores
tragedy on an epic scale, reckoning with the ways we deceive each
other and ourselves.” —Hamilton Cain, Oprah Daily
“The author’s choice to leave her stories suspended in a gelatinous
stew of human behavior is exactly what keeps her fiction so sticky;
we can’t shake it off. Intimacies makes you wonder just how much is
lost in the most basic translation — from one mind to another.”
—Jessica Ferri, Los Angeles Times
“Intimacies feels like a thriller, though I suppose it really isn’t
one; the author just has a remarkable way of bringing tension to
every encounter in this brief, sly novel about language and
identity . . . Kitamura plumbs different kinds of intimacy —
physical, verbal, emotional — in prose that creates its own unique
rhythms, as if it itself were translated: She strings sentences
together with commas, making rivers of words, and eschews quotation
marks so that statements blur into reflections. This results in a
book that feels almost painfully intimate; it’s as if we’ve slipped
inside the head of this quiet woman, navigating an unwelcoming
city, feeling its chill, trying to find home." —Moira Macdonald,
Seattle Times
“[F]ascinating and mysterious.” —NPR
“Katie Kitamura dazzles us again with Intimacies. Her style is
so perfectly suited to my taste that everything she writes
impresses. Her ability to impart vivacious detail with sparse and
direct prose is a testament to her talent, and the moments that she
is able to create between characters and places are memorable and
beautiful. This book has stuck with me for months now, and I think
of it often in the small moments of intimacy I find in my life."
—Buzzfeed
“A strange and mesmerizing tale about language, understanding, and
the role of strangers in our most intimate moments.” —Bookriot
“[Intimacies asks questions] with both a subtlety and an urgency
that makes Kitamura’s voice so distinct within contemporary
fiction. I read most of Intimacies in the early hours of the
morning, when the shapes and outline of your own home can feel,
temporarily, like they belong to someone else. In those hours, the
novel’s voice was the one I knew best, and I would forget myself
and my family sleeping nearby and become lost in the novel’s
suspense, and its beauty.” —Ashley Nelson Levy, BOMB
“[A] novel that carries enormous moral weight, attending to themes
of alienation, violence, and love, with every page written in the
most taut, gripping prose. It will haunt your dreams long after
you’ve turned down the last page.” —Tahmima Anam, E! Online
“Spare, exacting prose . . . with powerful questions about
morality, responsibility, and how we tell stories.” –
Shondaland
“There’s a restrained intensity to Katie Kitamura’s prose, one that
made her last novel, the superb divorce-meets-mystery drama A
Separation, feel like you were reading it in the eye of a tornado,
the tight, muted sentences suggesting an overwhelming tempest just
beyond them. It’s that willingness to keep readers at an intriguing
distance before revealing the messy emotions driving it all that
should serve her well in the new book, Intimacies, about a woman
trying to escape her past.” —A.V. Club
“Though it has all the ingredients for a story of global
intrigue…what Katie Kitamura's new novel, Intimacies, really
does is offer intrigue of a more, well, intimate sort. This is the
kind of book that quickens the pulse not because of logic-defying
plot twists, but rather because of how surgically precise it is in
revealing how our emotional realities take on epic dimensions in
our own minds, and often threaten our stability in the precise ways
that things of global import rarely do….psychologically
disconcerting — like all the very best thrillers.” —Refinery29
“Intimacies is a haunting, precise, and morally astute novel that
reads like a psychological thriller. It expertly and concisely
delves into the paradoxes of language—how language can obscure our
own complicity, and how language can enable us to escape our own
delusions. Katie Kitamura is a wonder; her work is striking,
stylish, and fully realized.” —Dana Spiotta, author of Innocents
and Others and Eat the Document
“Gripping and elegant. No one’s work simmers with emotional
complexity like Katie Kitamura’s.” —Mira Jacob, author of Good
Talk
"A novel about the ruthlessness of power, the check of virtue,
and the purportedly neutral bureaucracy meant to mediate between
them. Katie Kitamura is among the most brilliant and profound
writers at work today; she reminds me how high the moral stakes of
fiction can be.” —Garth Greenwell, author of Cleanness and What
Belongs to You
“Katie Kitamura writes about being an outsider like no other
author. Quiet moments are charged with tension and power. In short,
the book is remarkable - beautifully written and
intelligent.” —Avni Doshi, author of Burnt Sugar
“Intimacies is a perfect novel—taut and seductive. Kitamura has
made the existential thriller all her own, and she effortlessly
negotiates the personal and the geopolitical with a complex moral
nuance. Simply stunning.” —Brandon Taylor, author of Real Life and
Filthy Animals
"Saturated with enigmatic longing, Intimacies peels back the layers
of sympathy, antipathy, and morality that both connect and divide
us from others, unearthing something precious beneath. Katie
Kitamura is a revelatory interpreter of the human heart, in all its
brilliance and obscurity." —Alexandra Kleeman, author of You Too
Can Have a Body Like Mine
“Katie Kitamura’s voice — spare, electric, evocative — could take
me anywhere. Especially into this landscape of global wanderers,
uprooted women, fragmented souls. Intimacies is a singular pleasure
— a dangerous, seductive, dagger of a novel.” —Danzy Senna, author
of Caucasia and New People
“Katie Kitamura’s beautifully wrought novel is tense and
suspenseful, a mystery about human choices. From its protagonist’s
work as an interpreter at the Hague, from crimes against humanity,
to friendship and a love affair, the interpreter can’t escape
questions of judgment and justice. She balances tenuously on an
ethical scale, while interpretation itself is brilliantly employed
as the faulty method that subsumes all communication. Like a work
by Graham Greene, INTIMACIES kept me in its tight grip.” —Lynne
Tillman, author of Men and Apparitions
“Like her protagonist, Kitamura... is a master of precisely
evocative language. In her work and in her isolation, the
interpreter recognizes how familiarity can obscure intimacy, while
its lack can yet lead to discomfiting proximity. The novel takes
places so deeply within her that it's truly personlike, at once
forthright and mysterious, a piercing and propulsive meditation on
closeness of many sorts.” —Booklist (STARRED review)
“A watchful, reticent woman sees peril and tries not to vanish…
It's a delight to accompany the narrator’s astute observational
intelligence through these pages… She hears and doesn’t hear the
words amid her focus, just as she sees and doesn’t completely
register events in her everyday life…This is the crux of Kitamura’s
preoccupation. She threads it brilliantly through the intimacies
her character is trying to navigate: with new colleagues, women
friends, and her beau, who goes away; with the work and with the
nature of The Hague itself…The novel packs a controlled but
considerable wallop, all the more pleasurable for its nuance. This
psychological tone poem is a barbed and splendid meditation on
peril.” —Kirkus (STARRED review)
Praise for A Separation
“Kitamura is a writer with a visionary, visual imagination…
In A Separation, [she] has made consciousness her territory.
The book is all mind, and an observant, taut, astringent mind it
is.” —The New Yorker
“A slow burn of a novel that gathers its great force and intensity
through careful observation and a refusal to accept old, shopworn
narratives of love and loss.” —Jenny Offill, author of Dept. of
Speculation and Weather
“The burnt landscape, the disappearance of a man, the brilliantly
cold, precise, and yet threatening, churning tone of the
narrator—make A Separation an absolutely mesmerizing work of art.”
—Rachel Kushner, author of The Flamethrowers
“Fascinating, artful and atmospheric.” —Paula McLain,
Parade magazine
“Unsettling… Kitamura traces the narrator’s thoughts in sentences
striking for their control and lucidity, their calm surface belied
by the instability lurking beneath… The more the narrator tells us,
the less we trust her. And the less we trust her, the more this
hypnotic novel compels us to confront the limits of what we, too,
can know.” —O, the Oprah Magazine
“A novel so seamless, that follows its path with such consequence,
that even minor deviations seem loaded with meaning. Wonderful.”
—Karl Ove Knausgaard, author of My Struggle
“Accomplished… a coolly unsettling work.” —New York Times Book
Review
“Kitamura’s prose gallops, combining Elena Ferrante-style
intricacies with the tensions of a top-notch
whodunit.” —Elle
“Kitamura weaves a novel of quiet power, mostly due to a narrative
voice that is so subtly commanding—so effortlessly self-aware and
perceptive, teeming with dry yet empathetic humor—that it’s a
challenge not to follow her journey in a single
sitting.” —Harper's Bazaar
“Katie Kitamura breathes new life into the theme of marital
breakdown.” —The New Republic
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