A Paris Review Contributors' Favorite Book of 2020
A Ms. Magazine Best Poetry of 2020
A Refinery29 Best New Book of 2020
A Latin Post Must Read Book by Latin Authors
“The circles, the titular ‘thresholes,’ mark the thresholds between fragments. . . . In Montes’s work, these labels seem to say, don’t skip the white space—the gaps between language are part of the language.”
—Elisa Gabbert, New York Times
“I felt as though I was being beckoned into the book’s orbit. . . . I can’t wait to read it again.”
—Aisha Sabatini Sloan, The Paris Review
“[A] drifting, yet driven, meditation on grief and healing. . . . THRESHOLES fearlessly explores what it means to come close to formlessness.”
—Rachel Carroll, Los Angeles Review of Books
“Alongside [Montes], we tunnel through a series of hollow points, pressure positions, aesthetic snapshots. . . . A taxonomy of holes, but also of their edges, where they end and meet.”
—Trisha Low, The Believer
“Montes graces us with a unique ability to foresee how time may empower artistic utterances through the breakage.”
—Kara Laurene Pernicano, Full Stop
“A book-length epic about trauma and loss.”
—Ruben Quesada, Harvard Review
“A book we need during this time. . . . an unleashing of our identities trapped between the past and our becoming.”
—Diana Seo Hyung Lee, Degree Critical
“[A] powerful, beautiful work.”
—Refinery29
“THRESHOLES is a training manual for grief and desire. In this powerful and beautiful work, absence becomes an artifact, the only thing we get to touch.”
—Bhanu Kapil
“Lara Mimosa Montes is the powerhouse these troubled times need. A true heir of Marguerite Duras and Clarice Lispector, Montes writes with ferocious intellectual energy and emotional pungency, and she never takes the cautious path.”
—Wayne Koestenbaum
“Lara Mimosa Montes interrupts genre/gentrification in a thrilling book that brings to bear the notion of a ‘body I can in language throw,’ a most welcome disruption to lyric autofiction modalities.”
—Carmen Giménez Smith