KQED Radio
KQED Newssee more
Latest Newscasts:KQEDNPR
Player Sponsored By
upper waypoint

Miranda July Wrestles with the Female Midlife Crisis in ‘All Fours’

at
Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Miranda July's new book is "All Fours: A Novel." (Elizabeth Weinberg)

In Miranda July’s new novel, “All Fours,” a 45-year-old artist embarks on a solo roadtrip to New York from her Los Angeles home. She makes it as far as Monrovia, a small town a half-hour from L.A., and waits out the rest of her trip in a motel room while pursuing an infatuation with a Hertz rental car employee. The novel, which shares similarities with July’s own life, explores themes of marital ennui, the fear of sexual irrelevance and the contours of the female midlife crisis. July grew up in Oakland and is known for her performance art, her films “Me and You and Everyone We Know” and “Kajillionaire,” and her fiction “No One Belongs Here More Than You” and “The First Bad Man.” We talk to her about her new novel and why she describes it as “closer to the bone.”

Guests:

Miranda July, actor, screenwriter, director and author - She’s known for her films “Me and You and Everyone We Know” and “Kajillionaire,” and her fiction includes “No One Belongs Here More Than You” and “The First Bad Man”. Her new novel is "All Fours"

Sponsored

lower waypoint
next waypoint
Neuroscientist Rahul Jandial Explains Why We DreamAnnalee Newitz on How Stories are WeaponizedGrace Jung’s ‘K-Drama School’ Unpacks a Pop Culture PhenomenonSlow Burn Podcast Excavates Bay Area LGBTQ History with ‘Gays Against Briggs’Music Critic Ann Powers on ‘Traveling’ on Singer-Songwriter Joni Mitchell’s PathThe Global Battle to Control Food and Water Chronicled in Documentary ‘The Grab’National Academies Push for New Definition of Long COVID‘Father Time’ Explores How Parenthood Alters Men’s Brains and BodiesR.O. Kwon Mines Complexity of Desire, Both Romantic and Creative, in ‘Exhibit’Generative AI is Coming to California’s Public Sector. What Now?