Chris Kraus published her cult-hit debut novel "I Love Dick" the same month that legendary experimental writer Kathy Acker died of cancer, in 1997, at an alternative clinic in Tijuana, Mexico, at the young age of 53.
Though Kraus did not know her personally, they had overlapping friends and lovers, and Acker was hugely influential to Kraus (and many other writers) to this day. Although she was often called a "punk poet," Acker's writing defied genres and subverted definitions of identity and sexuality. Even dubbing her "experimental" does not suffice. Her life and work were often intertwined. Her novels are visceral and the style feels at once stream-of-consciousness, but as if written to be performed.
Kraus' new book, "After Kathy Acker," is something of a biography that she began shortly after Acker's death, then returned to many years later. Although based in Los Angeles, Kraus wrote it at her second home in northern Minnesota's Iron Range.
We caught up with Kraus, who will do a reading Thursday in Minneapolis, to learn more about her connection with Acker, her unlikely refuge in Minnesota and the current TV adaptation of "I Love Dick."
Q: What drew you to Kathy Acker? The book feels like a biography most of the time, yet you seem to have this insider knowledge, as well.
A: You're right, it is not a typical biography. Although I didn't really know her, we moved in similar circles. I especially got to be close friends with Matias Viegener in L.A. when I moved there. Matias was a younger friend of Kathy's who took care of her and became her literary executor. So I was in pretty close proximity to Kathy's illness and death, and I was very upset by it. There was something just so poignant and wrenching to see her life end in relative isolation in Tijuana at such a young age. I had just started writing and I thought to myself, "Oh, this is how it ends."
In the months after her death I made contact with a lot of people from her early life and did long interviews with them. Then I got interested in writing another book. I started working on "Aliens and Anorexia" and the Kathy Acker writing all went into the closet for, what, almost 20 years.
My last novel, "Summer of Hate," came out in 2012, and I kept thinking, "Well, what am I going to do next?" I didn't want to start another novel and it occurred to me that I might pick up the Acker book again and this time I had a very different perspective.