Events

In her new novel, Lecturer in Creative Writing Idra Novey zeroes in on the joys and difficulty of family, the ease with which we let distance mute conflict, and the power we can draw from creative pursuits. Please join us for a conversation between the author, fellow novelist and Creative Writing Director Yiyun Li.

About the Book: Take What You Need

Book cover with large white title letters and silhouettes of dark trees on each side

“Take What You Need” by Idra Novey (Viking/Penguin Random House, 3/23)

Set in the Allegheny Mountains of Appalachia, Take What You Need traces the parallel lives of Jean, and her beloved but estranged stepdaughter, Leah, who’s sought a clean break from her rural childhood. In Leah’s urban life with her young family, she has revealed little about Jean, how much she misses her stepmother’s hard-won insights and joyful lack of inhibition. But with Jean’s death, Leah must return to sort through what’s been left behind.

What Leah discovers is staggering: Jean has filled the house with giant sculptures she’s welded from scraps of the area’s industrial history. There’s also a young man now living in the house who’s played an unknown role in Jean’s last years and in her art

Passionate and resonant, Take What You Need explores the continuing mystery of the people we love most, and what can be built from what others have discarded—art, unexpected friendship, a new contentment of self.

About the Guests

Idra Novey is also the author of the acclaimed novels Those Who Knew and Ways to Disappear. Her poetry collections include Exit, Cvilian; The Next Country; and Clarice: The Visitor. Her works as a translator include Clarice Lispector’s novel The Passion According to G.H. and a co-translation with Ahmad Nadalizadeh of Iranian poet Garous Abdolmalekian, Lean Against This Late Hour. She teaches fiction at Princeton University’s Lewis Center for the Arts.

Yiyun Li’s most recent book is The Book of Goose. Her previous novels are Must I Go; Where Reasons End; Kinder Than Solitude; A Thousand Years of Good Prayers; The Vagrants; and Gold Boy, Emerald Girl; and the memoir Dear Friend, from My Life I Write to You in Your Life. Like Novey, she teaches workshops and directs the Program in Creative Writing at Princeton.

Tickets & Details

The reading and conversation will take place at Labyrinth Books on Nassau Street in Princeton, and the event will also be livestreamed. Free and open to the public; no advance registration required. View event info and livestream link

This event is co-presented by Labyrinth Books and the Princeton Public Library and cosponsored by Princeton University’s Humanities Council and Lewis Center for the Arts.

Presented By

  • Labyrinth Books

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