top of page

Kate Hunter/writer

Bio

Kate hunter/writer

66F9548D-AA10-4075-9CA7-86301B5258AD_edited.jpg
Work
In The Press

In the Press

7E730978-7B30-47F5-B7C9-B11C5A1D3FC3.jpeg

"With the help of a witchdoctor who always wears blue jeans and a t-shirt, a nameless narrator tries to recover her memory, which has strangely vanished. This is the point of departure for a complex structure--narratives within narratives--that recalls the procedures of the Oulipians and Raymond Roussel. Scary, mesmerizing, sometimes improbably funny, The Dream Sequence is a masterful performance." JOHN ASHBERY

"Hunter . . . explores the nature and limitations of memory while playing with the narrative form, her protagonist forced to navigate a world that doesn't quite make sense. The effect is something like Memento meets Alice in Wonderland. . . . Hunter has a talent for description. And she has interesting things to say about the nature of memory. Toward the book's end her protagonist dreams of a man Borges might have concocted, whose memory runs in the wrong direction: he 'remembers' the future, but once his memories are lived they are lost to him." DEBRA HAMEL, VOID MAGAZINE.

"Hunter works extraordinarily well within abstract restraints, writing in a severely loose writing style. Sentences are formed by a series of short phrases with scant punctuation that ramble from one nervous idea to the next. Highly effective. . . . On top of that, Hunter gives her protagonist some pretty interesting revelations about what her loss of memory means, such as attempting to regain your memory is much like living your life in reverse. In additon, not having your memory can give you a clean slate; if you can't remember having done anything to anyone, have those things actually happened?" RETROLOWFI.

"Our narrator wakes up lacking all memory. She is a blank slate; the victim of a curse. A stranger tells her that in order to regain her memory, she must 1) find out who put the curse on her, 2) find out why, and 3) return the curse to that person. Such a simple premise serves as the backdrop against which Kate Hunter’s The Dream Sequence, explores deep issues of dream states and the validity of being, and at its most poignant, asks simply “what are dreams?” CALEB J ROSS, OUTSIDER WRITERS, THE WASHINGTON PAPER

"If you find it hard to imagine a story with echoes of Samuel Beckett and Jim Thompson in equal measure, then you haven't read this terse, spookily compelling tale of a woman with no past, only a paranoid present in which things are neither what they seem--nor otherwise." BARRY GRAHAM

"The Dream Sequence follows a woman with no memory as she fights to regain her past through her dreams with the help of a witch doctor. Hunter deftly portrays the woman's struggles, both against her cursed amnesia and the bad memories she is sure to uncover." LARGEHEARTED BOY

"In The Dream Sequence, Kate Hunter explores memory from a fresh eye, tossing Franz Kafka and David Markson into the spin cycle to create a vision entirely her own. This compelling debut takes us inside the mind of a woman who has lost most of hers as she seeks to discover her life, and what that means when you have no memory. As written in Hunter's sharp new voice, you will want to join her on this finely-crafted, mysterious voyage of discovery." ELIZABETH CRANE

"Hunter has crafted a bizarre tale that gains particular force when her protagonist attempts to reconstruct her memory from what she sees in her dreams--as unreliable a guide as could be imagined. . . . [Hunter has] crafted a tight quandary. Amnesia, bereft of any sense of who is good or bad or right or wrong, has created a moral vacuum in the life of the protagonist, one that's impossible for her to fill." TIME OUT MAGAZINE

C47992B5-76BE-4841-8C8A-679F2F1C5BD7.jpeg

Kate Hunter fiction writer DC The Dream Sequence Condition Paradise Now

Kate Hunter lives in Washington, DC with her son and their Tibetan Mastiff. Her novel The Dream Sequence was published by Impetus Press, and she has pieces in Little Star Magazine and Poor Magazine. She has given readings in Chicago at the Sunday Salon reading series and in New York City at KGB, Housing Works Bookstore, and the Guerrilla Lit reading series.

CONTACT

FC8593F1-9B4F-471D-B870-56DE4E1F4B21.jpeg

 

Follow me:

  • Black LinkedIn Icon
3D98A7C0-1E7E-481C-91CB-1373BD714FD1.jpeg
© 2020 by Kate Hunter
Contact
bottom of page