


The Liars’ Clubcame first, detailing Karr’s feral upbringing with two alcoholic parents in an oil-refining Texas suckhole that she calls Leechfield. Her father is a working oilman with a devotion to the union, meaning long strikes and family poverty. Karr’s mother is the town anomaly: a painter and devotee of French existentialism, as well as a pill-popping loose cannon in her seventh marriage.The Liars’ Clubcontains some monstrous scenes. Karr is raped by a neighborhood boy and molested by a babysitter. Karr and her sister also witness their mother’s breakdown, her face scribbled with lipstick, wielding a butcher knife, building an indoor bonfire of the girls’ toys, clothes, and bedsheets.Karr’s next book wasCherry, which detailed her adolescent, druggy misadventures, run-ins with the law, romance with poetry, and sexual awakening.Litis her most recent book, chronicling her own beeline into alcoholism, breakdown, and the loony bin, then the struggle of sobriety and divorce. Karr meets a young David Foster Wallace in an AA meeting (he tattoos her name on his bicep before they’ve even kissed), and they are briefly engaged. Karr’s son makes her take him to church, “to see if God is there,” and she discovers spiritual regeneration with Catholicism, something that shocks nobody more than herself.Karr’s poetry has earned her a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Pushcart Prize, and she has written four engaging, stunning volumes, including the recent
Annoncering
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Annoncering
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