microbursts is a collection of hybrid, lyric essays about the places between life and death; memoir and poetry; making and letting go. Originally written by Reeder as an intense text-based collection of lyric and experimental essays responding to the illnesses and deaths of her parents, it confronts the raw emotions of crisis, grief and creativity. Through collaboration with Thomson, the project expanded to consider how design and visual intervention might alter the nature and impact of the text.The outcome is a book which explores the subjects of illness, crisis, creativity, caring, death and grief, alongside the aesthetic and formal concerns of cross-genre writing, including how image, formatting and text work together to create tension, understanding and pace, expanding the possibilities of the essay and the artist’s book.Formally audacious, linguistically fluid, sensitive and intricate in its visual presentation, microbursts uses the potential and elasticity of the essay form to explore intensely personal, yet universal, experiences and considers the ways in which we can express and communicate these through spatial and linguistic form. Crucially, it achieves these things effortlessly, with its accessible, poetic language and engaging narrative of family, love, care, grief, dying, death and creativity.
Elizabeth Reeder Boeken
Elizabeth K. Reeder verkent complexe thema's van identiteit, thuis en burgerschap via haar romans en essays. Haar werk, dat zich vaak verdiept in vooroordelen, verlangen en onconventionele sprookjes, wordt gekenmerkt door formele experimenten en hybride benaderingen. Reeder zet zich in om te schrijven op een manier die kennis in taal en structuur verankert, wat lezingen mogelijk maakt die vergelijkbaar zijn met poëzie en kunst. Haar diverse oeuvre, dat romans, verhalen en hoorspelen omvat, toont een diepe betrokkenheid bij ingewikkelde archieven, familie en de processen van rouw en ziekte.


An Archive of Happiness is set in the Scottish Highlands over the course of one day during the Avens family's annual get-together. It's the summer solstice and theirs is a fractured family, broken by arguments, by things said and not said, by a mother who has left and a father who was left behind.