【Switzerland movie 18+】
Introducing the MatingBook Club
The ‘Mating’ Book Club
On April 7, at our annual Spring Revel, we’re honoring Norman Rush with our Hadada Prize, presented each year to “a distinguished member of the writing community who has made a strong and unique contribution to literature.” To celebrate, the Dailyis hosting a book club of sorts.
Starting next Monday, March 16, we’re running a series of posts about Rush’s seminal 1991 novel, Mating. Twice a week, from start to finish, we’ll have writers examine a twenty-five-page installment of the book—not just to discuss the plot, but to offer the same spirit of reflection, debate, and restless inquiry that animates the novel itself. Whether you’re an avid fan of the book or completely new to it, we invite you to read along.

Norman Rush. Photo © Wyatt Mason
Mating, which won the National Book Award for fiction in 1991, takes place in Botswana in the early 1980s; its narrator, an American anthropologist in her early thirties, is brilliant, sui generis, and on the make. With an exploded thesis on her hands, she decides to pursue Nelson Denoon, a charismatic intellectual who’s set up a utopian experiment in the Kalahari Desert: a radically matriarchal society by and for impoverished African women. Full of brio and dry wit, Matingis at once a romance, a picaresque, and a bracing novel of ideas: in its orbit you’ll find meditations on everything from feminism to geopolitics, from George K. Zipf’s principle of least effort to earwax. Jim Shepard, writing for the New York Times Book Review, said that Mating“seeks to illuminate the nature of true intimacy—how to define it, how to know when one has achieved it. And few books evoke so eloquently that state of love at its apogee.” And the book has influenced a whole generation of novelists: in a poll by the Times Book Review, writers under forty voted Matingone of the best American novels of the last quarter century.
We hope you’ll pick up a copy of Matingand join us. We’re also giving away copies to three readers—just retweet the announcement below to enter the lottery. We’ll choose three winners at random after twenty-four hours.
We’re starting a book club for Norman Rush’s MATING—read along! RT for a chance to win a copy: http://t.co/GqOFojBGkB pic.twitter.com/tMfoxwmLHZ
— The Paris Review (@parisreview) March 9, 2015
Dan Piepenbring is the web editor of The Paris Review.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
This Could Revolutionize That
2025-06-25 23:11Staff Picks: Our Favorites from 2015
2025-06-25 22:54Yeats’s “Second Coming”—Our Most Thoroughly Pillaged Poem
2025-06-25 22:10No News Is Good News
2025-06-25 21:10Popular Posts
Begone, President
2025-06-25 23:05Your Chrome tabs are a mess — and Google has a plan to fix them
2025-06-25 22:55TikTok is all about the 'one thing about me' trend
2025-06-25 22:32In the Studio with Aidan Koch
2025-06-25 22:23A Right to Police Accountability
2025-06-25 21:33Featured Posts
Yesterday’s Liberal
2025-06-25 22:53A New Year’s Recommendation: The Score to “Thief of Bagdad”
2025-06-25 22:28How to get the AI '90s yearbook photos all over TikTok
2025-06-25 21:459 things we learned from MrBeast's Rolling Stone cover story
2025-06-25 21:43Best eye massager deal: Save $50 on RENPHO Eye Massager
2025-06-25 20:51Popular Articles
Making Sausage of Salazar
2025-06-25 23:19In the Studio with Aidan Koch
2025-06-25 22:18Retail Therapy: Notes on Giving and Shopping
2025-06-25 22:12Hot World, Cooler Heads
2025-06-25 21:15Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (98944)
Style Information Network
Boys to Men
2025-06-25 23:31Expressing Aspiration Information Network
Scam Alert: Amazon Prime Video users are being tricked into paying fake fees
2025-06-25 23:10Unobstructed Information Network
The 13 funniest tweets of the week, from vibe shifts to wooden birds
2025-06-25 22:55Belief Information Network
Why John Updike Loved Comics
2025-06-25 21:31Sharing Information Network
They Want New Blood
2025-06-25 21:28