Michelle Tea's memoirs include The Passionate Mistakes, The Chelsea Whistle, Rent Girl, and Valencia, winner of a Lambda Literary Award for Best Lesbian Fiction. Valencia was also made into a feature-length film and toured film festivals globally, and the book was translated into Slovenian, Japanese, and German. She is also the author of the novel Rose of No Man's Land, and editor of anthologies Pills, Thrills, Chills and Heartache; Without a Net; It's So You; and Baby, Remember My Name. She is also the author of a Young Adult fantasy trilogy being published by McSweeney's. Her most recent book is How to Grow Up, a memoir in essays published by Penguin/Plume.
Michelle was the recipient of an award from the Rona Jaffe Foundation, a GOLDIE in Literature from the San Francisco Bay Guardian, and selected Best Local Writer by both the Guardian and San Francisco Weekly.
Michelle writes for various print and web publications, including The Believer, n+1, Buzzfeed, and xoJane. She is the creator of Mutha Magazine, an online publication about real-life parenting.
In 1994 Michelle Tea created Sister Spit, an all-girl open mic
that ran weekly for two years in San Francisco, earning a Best of
the Bay Award from The San Francisco Bay Guardian. From 1997 - 1999
Sister Spit toured the United States, bringing an ever-changing
roster of female writers and performance artists across the
country, including poet Eileen Myles, New York Times Bestselling
author Beth Lisick, and transgender author, musician and
performance artist Lynn Breedlove. In 2003 Michelle founded RADAR
Productions, a literary non-profit organization that oversees a
multitude of queer-centric projects.
"A Gen-X queer girl's version of the bohemian counter-canon." --New
York Times "Events, though outlandish, are narrated with total
conviction, and powerfully express the intensity both of attaining
sobriety and of the writing process." --The New Yorker "Gliding
deftly through issues of addiction and recovery, erasure and
assimilation, environmental devastation and mass delusion about our
own pernicious tendencies, this is a genre- and reality-bending
story of quiet triumph for the perennial screw-up and unabashed
outsider. A biting, sagacious, and delightfully dark metaliterary
novel about finding your way in a world on fire." --Kirkus (starred
review)
"In Tea's skillfully loose, lusty prose, Michelle is both
vulnerable and brash, blitzing through lovers and bags of heroin,
terrified but also convinced of her own invincibility... [A]n
important portrait of the late '90s." --Publishers Weekly "It's
this rawness that makes Black Wave so disarming, a rollicking
hallucinatory fantasy that's as sobering as cold air. . . .It's
sentimental and reckless and not quite like anything I've read
before. An apocalypse novel that makes you feel hopeful about the
world: could anything be more timely?" --The Guardian "A
philosophical meditation on the end times, complete with suicides,
protests, magical dreams, and Matt Dillon." --Los Angeles Review of
Books "The prose is fucking gorgeous, the characters are hilarious
and upsetting and miserable, the world is heart-stopping in its
strangeness and bleak crawl to the edge of the cliff, then its
tumble over the edge." --Tor.com "Out of a messy, scabrous delve
into the personal, Tea has created something uncomfortably funny
and bleakly gorgeous." --New Statesman
"[L]yrical but blunt, capturing her narrator's duel hopelessness
and genuine desire for a life full of love and promise. . . .this
book exists in a new kind of literary ecosystem--one that doesn't
need to fit neatly into the structures of an older era." --BUST
"A love letter to literature's lasting power and the ability of
writing to save one's future. . . . If the world is going to end,
then Tea's way out isn't so bad." --SF Chronicle "Messy, poignant,
funny, sad, visionary--Black Wave is pretty much everything." --The
Millions
"A profoundly queer book." --Full-Stop
"A dreamy apocalypse novel, and a fine exploration of how fiction
and nonfiction live side by side." --Lambda Literary
"An inventive and challenging read." --The Irish Times "A surreal,
unique journey through the anxieties and realities of climate
change." --Jeff VanderMeer, author of Annihilation "I was unable
put to Black Wave down, suddenly afraid and unsure of what was out
there beyond my reading. This bad fairytale-come-true is
destabilizing and palpable, and it's Michelle Tea's most fearless
book. It's a radically honest, scary, and wonderful place that
Michelle has spun. It shook me up." --Eileen Myles, author of
Chelsea Girls
"Scary, funny and genre-bending--a mind-blowing meta-poem--Black
Wave is Michelle Tea's most ambitious, complex, and imaginative
work so far. An investigation of addiction's apocalypse, it's
somehow wonderfully strange, daring, and dirty and yet completely
universal and true." --Jill Soloway, creator of Transparent
"Listen up: it's the end of the world and Michelle Tea is the best
writer to be with. She's got the smarts and the laughs, the
sharpness and the love, the grit and the skin and the ink she needs
to see us through. I'm sticking with her until there's nothing
left." --Daniel Handler, author of We Are Pirates
"I worship at the altar of this book. Somehow Michelle Tea has
managed to write a hilarious, scorching, devastatingly observed
novel about addiction, sex, identity, the 90s, apocalypse, and
autobiography, while also gifting us with an indispensable
meditation on what it means to write about those things--indeed, on
what it means to write at all. A keen portrait of a subculture, an
instant classic in life-writing, a go-for-broke exemplar of queer
feminist imagination, a contribution to crucial, ongoing
conversations about whose lives matter, Black Wave is a rollicking
triumph." --Maggie Nelson, author of The Argonauts
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