The highly popular Chilean cusk-eels hang out around methane seeps. By Andrew Paul Published Oct 21, 2025 2:40 PM EDT Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 ...
This Thursday, The Yale Review and the Whitney Humanities Center invited Rachel Cusk — a prolific British novelist, memoirist and essayist — as this year’s Finzi-Contini lecturer. At the event, Cusk ...
Relocation and upheaval have been a feature of Rachel Cusk’s life. Born in Saskatoon, Canada in 1967, she spent her early childhood in Los Angeles before moving to East Anglia in the UK to be educated ...
Rachel Cusk’s novel "Parade" has won the Goldsmiths Prize. The acclaimed British writer’s 12th novel was awarded the £10,000 (€12,000) prize at a ceremony at Foyles bookshop in London. "Parade" is an ...
PARADE. By Rachel Cusk. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux. 208 pages. $27. Rachel Cusk’s latest novel “Parade” is, like most of her novels, a slender, elegantly constructed work that bulges with ideas. The ...
Rachel Cusk’s Parade appears in its early pages to uphold a grand tradition: the novel about an artist. G is a painter, much admired but “angry and hurt by the world.” G, notable for rendering images ...
Rachel Cusk’s 12th novel, Parade, is classic Cusk-ery. In this experimental novel, sans plot, the narrative steps between interlinked observations about different artists; all named G, some male, some ...
In a moving scene from the aboriginal chapter ‘The Stuntman’ in Rachel Cusk’s recent book, Parade, the female narrator is “hit forcibly in the head” by a strange woman (a semi-autobiographical element ...
They say everybody loves a parade. But not everyone has been loving Rachel Cusk’s thusly titled new novel, the latest in the stylistic continuum of books that began a decade ago with the Outline ...
In her latest work, Cusk probes questions about the connections between freedom, gender, domesticity, art, and suffering. In her latest novel, Parade, Rachel Cusk once again flouts traditional ...
In her latest novel, Parade, Rachel Cusk once again flouts traditional narrative to probe questions about the connections between freedom, gender, domesticity, art, and suffering in a series of ...