Alice Knott Explained

Alice Knott
Author:Blake Butler
Country:United States
Publisher:Riverhead Books
Void Corporation
Author:Blake Butler
Country:United States
Publisher:Archway Editions

Alice Knott is a 2020 novel by American author Blake Butler.[1] The novel concerns the theft and destruction of a painting collection and its impact on the painting's original owner, the titular Alice Knott.[2] In The Nation, Brooks Sterritt wrote that the book "...resonates so strongly with life under lockdown", though noting that the book was completed before the 2020 pandemic.[3]

In 2024 it will be released in paperback by Archway Editions as Void Corporation.[4]

Development and writing

Butler's earliest inspiration for the book was a note written to himself reading “Corporation that buys and destroys art”.[5] He was further inspired by the Thomas Pynchon novel The Crying of Lot 49.[5]

Reception

In The New York Times, Lauren Wilkinson wrote “There’s an exceptional amount of intention and control on display in the telling of this story. . . . Don’t expect a conventional reading experience. Alice Knott is a meditation on art and perception whose form seems to serve as both a meta-comment on the function of the novel, and a challenge to the expectations that a reader should bring to one. It’s rare for me to enjoy and value a book on those terms, but this one worked for me. And even more to the point, I respected it for insisting that I rise to its challenge.”[1]

In Los Angeles Review of Books, John Domini wrote that the "constant worrying at what’s genuinely personal, struggling to detach it from the endless play of light across wall and screen, strikes me as an undeniably contemporary project.”[2]

Notes and References

  1. News: Wilkinson . Lauren . Bring Your Flamethrower. In This Novel, Art Feels the Burn. . 16 December 2020 . The New York Times . 24 July 2020.
  2. News: Domini . John . Undeniably Contemporary: On Blake Butler's "Alice Knott" . 16 December 2020 . Los Angeles Review of Books . 1 August 2020.
  3. News: Sterritt . Brooks . Is This the First Great Quarantine Novel? . 16 December 2020 . The Nation . 2 September 2020.
  4. Web site: Simon & Schuster.
  5. News: Jones . Shane . An Interview with Blake Butler . 17 December 2020 . Believer Magazine . The Believer . 6 July 2020.