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Grand Valley: On Going to Hell, to France, and Back to Childhood

Contributor(s): Meis, Morgan (Author)

ISBN: 9781639821990

Publisher: Slant Books

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Pub Date: August 26, 2025

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.50" H x 8.00" L x 5.00" W ( 0.49 lbs) 220 pages

Series: Three Paintings Trilogy

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

In the final, absorbing volume of his Three Paintings Trilogy, philosopher and critic Morgan Meis explores the art of Joan Mitchell.

Brief description: Morgan Meis writes about art and culture for such magazines as n+1, Harper's, and Slate. He is a contributor at The New Yorker. Meis is the author of The Drunken Silenus, The Fate of the Animals, and Dead People (with Stefany Anne Golberg). He won the Whiting Award for Nonfiction in 2013. He has a PhD in philosophy from The New School for Social Research. He lives in Detroit.

Review Quotes:

The best book I have read in years-profound, charismatic, and funny. It makes you happy to be able to read and to play out the life you are, even if selfhood is an absurd endeavor and even if "Life" per se really isn't something that you should try to write about. Meis doesn't "try," and yet what emerges is a shimmering story of existence, via Joan Mitchell, big valleys, Gertrude Stein, foliage, Carl Jung, Aeneas and Dido, the color blue, fuckfests, Lord Chandos, dogwalkers, water lilies. Utterly absorbing.

-Jane Bennett, author of Influx & Efflux: Writing Up with Walt Whitman

With The Grand Valley, Morgan Meis is back with another one of his topsy-turvy, loop-de-loop joyrides of an appreciation. This time his ostensible subject is Joan Mitchell (on whom he is very good), but Claude Monet, Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas, Heloise and Abelard, Carl Jung, and Hugo von Hofmannsthal, among others, all get roped in to compoundingly delirious effect. Indeed, this thin volume is one long prose poem, and Meis is Mitchelling away, doing in thinking and writing-thrusting, daubing, scritching and scratching, keening, recanting, abreacting, dis-individuating, becoming present and nothing else-exactly what he's shown us Mitchell herself was doing with her great painting series. It's all dazzling to watch, and in the end quite devastating.

-Lawrence Weschler, author of Seeing is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees and the Wondercabinet Substack

Once again, Morgan Meis shows he's one of the most perceptive, interesting, and inventive critics working today. I'll read anything by him-and so, I implore, should you.

-Tom Bissell, author of Apostle and Magic Hours

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