Elvia Wilk is a writer living in New York. Her work has appeared in publications like Frieze, Artforum, Bookforum, Granta, The Atlantic, n+1, The White Review, BOMB, Mousse, Flash Art, and Art Agenda. She is currently a contributing editor at e-flux Journal. She is the recipient of a 2019 Andy Warhol Arts Writers Grant and a 2020 fellowship at the Berggruen Institute. Her first novel, Oval, was published by Soft Skull in 2019.
A AnOther Magazine Most Anticipated Book
"Perhaps 'essays' is too slight a description for Death by
Landscape, which strikes me as the stealth memoir of a
supertaster of the present moment-a citizen of our suffering
species who has chosen storytelling as her armor for survival.
Whatever you call it, Wilk's book strengthens me to go on with the
essential work, and makes me awfully eager for her next." -Jonathan
Lethem
"Elvia Wilk's essays expose our relationship to the natural
world-and possible extinction-with new urgency and maybe even
hope." -Emma Alpern, Vulture
"Elvia Wilk's Death by Landscape offers readers a heady take
on some of the novelists, thinkers, and artists whose work reflects
the world outside our window-and what they can teach us as we
venture into the future." -Tobias Carroll, InsideHook
"Casts an eye at VanderMeer and other masters of the 'new weird'
fiction-i.e., books that have an ecological awareness while
exploring the uncanny." -Shane Anderson, Spike Art
Magazine
"Wilk-a skilful observer of human behaviour attuned to the
environmental catastrophes we face-always offers weird and
refreshing frameworks for us to reconsider our place within the
Anthropocene." -Claudia Kensani Saviotti, Frieze
"Elvia Wilk is a wonderful (and strange) mind to spend time with,
and Death by Landscape, an essay collection billed as 'fan
nonfiction,' gives readers ample room to do just that . . .This is
what a beach read really looks like." -Johnny Diamond, A
Literary Hub Most Anticipated Book of the Year
"Superb . . . Fiery . . . Elegant and powerful. This one packs a
punch." -Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Eclectic . . . Wide-ranging . . . The author makes us look at the
world and speculative creations in a new, defamiliarized way."
-Kirkus Reviews
"Elvia Wilk is one of the most exciting essayists working today. I
love this book." -Catherine Lacey, author of Pew
"With evocative clarity and intuitive rigor, Elvia Wilk's Death
by Landscape guides us through a troubled terrain criss-crossed
by that most uncanny of entities, 'nature.' This is writing that
uniquely extends the tradition of speculative nonfiction,
delineating a new constellation of culture and climate that
ultimately points to the nebulous horizon of human being itself."
-Eugene Thacker, author of In the Dust of This Planet and
Infinite Resignation
"Elvia Wilk has written a guidebook and a philosophy for living in
a precarious world, in essays that are searching and funny,
self-assured and unguarded all at once. With each chapter Wilk
directs her telescopic focus on plants and rot, mysticism and black
holes, female embodiment and trauma, weaving together seemingly
disparate topics with an intelligence that recalls the best of Mark
Fisher and Wayne Koestenbaum. Reading Death by Landscape, I
feel terrified and exalted, expanded, in awe." -Madeleine Watts,
author of The Inland Sea
"Elvia Wilk's learned and bracing essays distribute the mind out
beyond the stubborn habits and enclosures of our 'humanities'-out
past hack plots or boundaries assigned to gender or species-where
it can expand into subsoil or outer space or corpuscle in
narratives weird enough to reflect another human/non-human social
life." -Keller Easterling, author of Medium Design and
Extrastatecraft
"Elvia Wilk reports on psychic borders, the lines drawn between
earth and earthling, plant and steward, healthy and sick. She finds
false binaries we hadn't even thought to count and asks the human
to find its humanity, gently but without wavering. Brilliant and
swift, as she always is." -Sasha Frere-Jones, musician and
writer
"Wilk reads the world like an insect reads a garden; her approach
is sensory and kaleidoscopic, buzzing beyond manicured surfaces to
get at the fertile, loamy rot beneath everything from black holes
and science fiction dystopias to martyred saints and larpers.
Beautifully brainy, bug-eyed, and weird." -Claire Evans, author of
Broad Band
"I love these weird essays. They do best what weirdness always
wants to do: defamiliarize the world around us so that we may
better see where we've ended up, where we might be going, and
who-or what-has been chasing after us all this time. Weirdness,
Elvia Wilk writes, 'provides a sort of methodology for reading
stories that lead toward the black hole.' The stuff (places,
people, things) that resists description, challenges our fictions
and non-fictions. A black hole is impossible to enter without
warping your reality, death beyond death: Wilk scrapes the event
horizon and gazes at last into the spooky abyss." -Andrew Durbin,
author of Skyland and MacArthur Park
"Elvia Wilk's brilliant interlinked essays show why fiction
matters in a time of climate catastrophe, species devastation, and
radical inequality. From the old weird to the new, sci-fi to
cli-fi, medieval women's mysticism to larps, Wilk gives us a
roadmap through unfamiliar pasts and unsettling presents, pointing
toward unpredictable futures that fiction-in its multiple,
shifting, compostable forms-enables us to imagine. Treading the
fine, impossible line between dystopia and utopia, between trauma,
its repetition, and its working through, Wilk doesn't pretend
fiction can fix everything, but she does insist-and she shows-that
the effects of fiction 'are myriad small explosions with
far-reaching fragments,' fragments that help us grapple with what
life means and how best to live it while we can." -Amy Hollywood,
author of Acute Melancholia
"Elvia Wilk is that cool person I want to hang out with at
the end of the world. Too smart to despair and too curious to not
re-examine even the most studied phenomena (nature, trauma,
ambition . . .) until they're no longer familiar and are catching
new light. Death by Landscape is expansive, athletic, weird,
and funny." -Britt Wray, author of Generation Dread and
Rise of the Necrofauna
"It's rare to come across an essay collection that veers so
far into the wilds of weirdness, only to return from these distant
outposts with something so deeply honest, vulnerable, and close.
Elvia Wilk is a writer of exceptional talent, but it is the sheer
scale and scope of her curiosity that makes these essays not only
unforgettable, but intellectually rearranging. Death by
Landscape pulls off a wondrous bit of alchemy-it takes what
might otherwise be terminus ideas, sites of conclusion, and
transforms them into conduits of passage, a way of reassessing what
it means to be human in this age of endless unmooring." -Omar El
Akkad, author of What Strange Paradise and American
War
"This book is amazing. It brought me back to sanity, space,
and language." -Jenny Hval, author of Paradise Rot and
Girls Against God
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