Five months pregnant and facing a creative block, JoAnna Novak becomes captivated by the reclusive Abstract Expressionist painter Agnes Martin. She is intrigued by the contradictions in Martin’s life and art—the delicate yet precise brushstrokes that create grid-like compositions, both rigid and ethereal. Most compelling is Martin’s commitment to her craft despite battling paranoid schizophrenia. As JoAnna grapples with the physical changes of pregnancy, she slips back into harmful habits and thoughts. When she reveals her struggles with depression and suicidal ideation to her doctor, he dismisses her concerns, urging her to prioritize her unborn child and take antidepressants. Offended by his condescending attitude and lack of understanding of her mental health history, JoAnna resolves to immerse herself in Martin’s world instead, embracing the painter’s philosophy of joyful solitude. She rents a house in Taos, committing to three weeks of isolation: no phone, no emails, no conversations with her husband, and no interaction with her dog. Through this deep engagement with Martin’s work, JoAnna discovers a new perspective on her own contradictions, learning to navigate the complexities of her body and the joys and challenges of impending motherhood.
JoAnna Novak Livres
L'écriture de JoAnna Novak explore les complexités de la psyché et des relations humaines, caractérisée par une perspicacité aiguë et une voix distinctive. Elle aborde des thèmes tels que l'anxiété, l'identité et le désir, souvent à travers une prose lyrique et évocatrice. Ses romans et recueils de poésie révèlent une profonde compréhension de l'expérience humaine, laissant une impression durable chez les lecteurs. Novak est une autrice qui n'hésite pas à explorer les recoins les plus sombres de l'âme humaine, y trouvant à la fois beauté et vérité.


A poetry collection contorting the idea of home away from being a site of comfort and nourishment by coaxing the reader to think about domesticity in knotty new ways Domestirexia goes beyond the entanglement of "domestic" and "anorexia” exploring a behind-closed-doors sensuality, borne in the concept of making home. Home can be a space of both resistance and discomfort that one desires or takes pleasure in enjoying. Rote notions of home and the domestic are reimagined in these poems as estranging, excessive, and populated by unknowable characters. Exploring themes of family, sacrifice, disease, death, money, cooking, romance, sex, art, and the visceral qualities of the everyday, the poems twist themselves into binds for the reader to undo or surrender to. Quarantined at her in-law’s house during Covid, Novak wrote these poems while watching The Great British Baking Show, reading The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, skimming Grimm Brothers fairy tales, and babysitting an infant. These are poems about wanting to misbehave. Light voyeurism at home, with gin and cake.