IF YOU’RE A GIRL (REVISED & EXPANDED EDITION)
By Ann Rower
Introduction by Sheila Heti
In the beginning when everything was very sexual we talked about our fantasies. She thought about having a guy for some of it. She thought about having a gun. I had gone through a lot to get away from guys so I admit that the thought of going back to them, even for a little adventure, was surprising and disconcerting …
Ann Rower’s first book, If You’re a Girl, published by Semiotext(e)’s Native Agents series in 1991 in tandem with Cookie Mueller’s Walking Through Clear Water in a Pool Painted Black, cemented her reputation as the Eve Babitz of lower Manhattan.
Rower was fifty-three years old at the time. Her stories—urtexts of female autofiction—had long been circulating within the poetry and postpunk music scenes. They were unlike anyone else’s: disarming, embarrassing, psuedoconfessional tales of everyday life dizzily told and laced with dry humor. In If You’re a Girl, she recounts her adventures as Timothy Leary’s babysitter, her artistic romance with actor Ron Vawter, and her attempts to evade a schizophrenic stalker.
Rower went on to publish two novels: Armed Response (1995) and Lee & Elaine (2002). After the 2002 suicide of her partner, the writer Heather Lewis, Rower stopped writing for almost two decades. And then she picked up where If You’re a Girl left off. No longer a girl, she produced dozens of stories from her life in New York as an octogenarian.
This new, expanded edition includes most of the original book, together with selections from both her novels and her recent writings. If You’re a Girl is a trailblazing book that manifests Rower’s influence on a generation of writers, and proves that mature reflection needn’t be lacking in attitude.
“I know no other voice as full of surprises and unexpected, startling insights, championship chess moves disguised as digressions as Ann Rower’s. Her sleight-of-hand modesty, the deadpan tone, is the highest form of aesthetic cunning. She isn’t only a born storyteller, she’s a born truth-teller, a much rarer bird, especially these days.”
—Gary Indiana
“Bitterly funny.”
—Glen Hefland, the Guardian
“There is no writer like Ann Rower. She has the keenest eye and the most readable voice, making the reader feel magically initiated into a better, richer, more fascinating version of the world. The relationships and adventures detailed here feel at once familiar and made new by Rower's gift for natural storytelling. I love this book so much.”
—Emily Gould, author of Friendship and Perfect Tunes
Paperback, 384 pp.
Published April 30, 2024