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FIONA ALISON DUNCAN
FIONA ALISON DUNCAN is a Canadian-American author and artist. Her debut novel Exquisite Mariposa won the 2020 LAMBDA Literary Prize for Bisexual Fiction.

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Interview with Fanny Howe

Interview

Issue No. 29

FIONA ALISON DUNCAN

Interview

Issue No. 29

Fanny Howe’s bibliography is as bewildering as her itinerant biography. Born in 1940 in Buffalo, New York, the poet and author grew up in...

Interview

January 2020

Interview with Jamieson Webster

FIONA ALISON DUNCAN

Interview

January 2020

Jamieson Webster serves as a torchbearer for a field out of popular favour. Her practice, psychoanalysis, was last century’s...

KARA   I’ve been doing this lately, leaving the flat when Luke’s at work, switching the phone to airplane mode It feels like practice, like I’m building up to something   London is skittish and excitable, a collective disquiet in the dusk The fires have been lit and the air is cinder toffee and carbon I’m following the dark gleam of the river Lea, the domes of light over Canary Wharf No one knows I’m here and the feeling is sweet and weightless like candy floss   I waited until Luke had crossed the square, disappeared on to Mile End Road, before I grabbed the ankle boots from the cupboard, dusted my face with bronzing powder He’d left towels on the bathroom floor, a sheen of condensation on the walls I rubbed a circle in the mirror, raced through the ritual: orange lipstick, copper eyeshadow, black kohl The minutes had colluded with him as he paced and nitpicked in the hallway, I thought he’d never go   Canning Town is there, a mute glow beyond the pylons and recycling plants of Star Lane Visibility is patchy, a brownish fog rising from the marshes at Leamouth The terrain is deeply ingrained, I could draw all its lanes and alleys if I had to, but tonight it plays tricks, forges duplicates and wrong turnings I crisscross avenues of crashed cars and high brick walls, stopping sometimes to look through padlocked gates There are yards inside yards, palettes burning like signalling beacons It should be easy to find Idris, to follow the map with the Ordnance Arms circled in black The lines are scored deep, still legible in the half-light of stalled construction sites Seeing him in September had caught me off guard; he was suddenly there in front of McDonald’s, eyes lasering through the crowds I’d been out of circulation so long I’d started to think I’d imagined those years before Luke; they were like pages in a dream journal, marvellous and unreachable But in the blue-white light of that shopping centre, with its auto-tuned pop and

Contributor

June 2019

FIONA ALISON DUNCAN

Contributor

June 2019

FIONA ALISON DUNCAN is a Canadian-American author and artist. Her debut novel Exquisite Mariposa won the 2020 LAMBDA Literary...

Exquisite Mariposa

Fiction

July 2019

FIONA ALISON DUNCAN

Fiction

July 2019

I broke three contracts in 2016. The first was verbal, a monogamy clause. But he was fucking around too, and I knew, because everybody...

READ NEXT

poetry

June 2016

from GERMINAL

Chloe Stopa-Hunt

poetry

June 2016

  1. Waste-Gold   These songs are waste-gold a matter of passing time together as we wait for night...

feature

May 2014

How Imagination Remembers

Maria Fusco

feature

May 2014

How imagination remembers is twofold, an enfolded act of greed and ingenuity. I believe these impulses to be linked...

Art

March 2013

Strangely Ordinary: Ron Mueck's art of the uncanny

Anouchka Grose

Art

March 2013

Since the Stone Age, people have been concerned with the problem of how to represent life.   Cave paintings...

 

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