“[O]NE Is Lost to Understand What This Has to Do With the [Black] Experience”: Percival Everett, André Alexis, and Racialized Authorial Expectations.Published in:2023By:Maus, Derek C.Publication type:Literary Criticism
The Power of Patriarchy: Everett’s Work on the Dionysus Myth in Frenzy.Published in:2023By:Buschendorf, ChristaPublication type:Literary Criticism
“I Heard You Went to Nam”: Frontier Mythology, Violence, and the Afterlife of the Vietnam War in Percival Everett’s: Walk Me to the Distance.Published in:2023By:Mitchell, Keith BernardPublication type:Literary Criticism
Prefigurative Poetics: Language Writing’s New Sentence and the Politics of the New Left.Published in:Orbit, 2023, v. 11, n. 1, p. 1, doi. 10.16995/orbit.10213By:Aarhus, Mathies G.Publication type:Article
America’s Deserter: Forms of Racialised Mistreatment and Escaping the Need to Escape in Percival Everett’s American Desert.Published in:2023By:Kowalik, GeorgePublication type:Literary Criticism
Introduction: Playing Metafictional Games with Percival Everett.Published in:Orbit, 2023, v. 11, n. 1, p. 1, doi. 10.16995/orbit.11250By:Pöhlmann, SaschaPublication type:Article
Archive, Intertextuality and Genre in Percival Everett’s The Trees (2021).Published in:2023By:Keeble, Arin;Harrison, Sheri-MariePublication type:Literary Criticism
Impossible Chess, Close Reading, and Inattention as Disability in Percival Everett’s Telephone.Published in:2023By:Eve, Martin PaulPublication type:Literary Criticism
Selling San Narciso: Pierce Inverarity as Insider Innovator in The Crying of Lot 49.Published in:2023By:Johnson, FredPublication type:Literary Criticism
Revising National Myths Through Queer Kinship in Percival Everett’s Wounded.Published in:2023By:Nolan-Brueck, SarahPublication type:Literary Criticism