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Lark Benobi

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Lark Benobi

Goodreads Author


Born
in Menominee, Michigan, USA
Website

Twitter
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Genre

Influences
P. D. Eastman, Fred Gipson, Eric Knight, Jim Kjelgaard

Member Since
November 2017

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I'm the avatar of author Claire Oshetsky, who wrote the novels Poor Deer , published in January 2024, and Chouette , published in November 2021.

Even though I'm a lowly avatar, I am an author, too, of The Book of Dog , a lighthearted apocalyptic romp in which women inherit the earth, just as Laura Dern predicted they would in the 1993 classic Jurassic Park. It has pictures.

I'm a big reader and I love exchanging views with other book lovers here on Goodreads. The comments I leave after reading a book aren't recommendations. They aren't strictly reviews. They're snapshot reflections of my reading experience. If I don't like a book very well the first time I frequently go back to read it again, to see what I mi
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Lark Benobi Vivienne, I'm so happy that you read The Book of Dog! That is my little love-child of a book, and it will always be my favorite, because I self-publis…moreVivienne, I'm so happy that you read The Book of Dog! That is my little love-child of a book, and it will always be my favorite, because I self-published it, and then the feedback I got from readers (mostly here on goodreads) gave me the courage to look for an agent for the next novel I wrote, which became Chouette.

It appears that I'm -not- done with shapeshifting and its fictional possibilities. My next novel in the queue (called Poor Deer, to be published Jan 2024) has a titular big mythic beast in it, who is also the manifestation of a human character in the novel.

After Poor Deer, the book I'm writing next is all about transmogrification, along with every other kind of trans-ness. My working title for this story is "Wander," but that's likely to change. It's never clear to me if any given story is going to work until I get to the end of a first draft, which I haven't done yet with Wander. Sometimes stories stall on me in the middle. But it's the story I'm most excited about telling at the moment.

I've heard writers aren't supposed to talk about their works in progress. Oh, well.(less)
Lark Benobi 'poingu' was my original name on goodreads and I still answer to it here and in some online havens. there is no rhyme or reason to this name--it came …more'poingu' was my original name on goodreads and I still answer to it here and in some online havens. there is no rhyme or reason to this name--it came from a screen captcha in 2005. (less)
Average rating: 3.91 · 176 ratings · 78 reviews · 1 distinct workSimilar authors
The Book of Dog

3.91 avg rating — 180 ratings — published 2018 — 7 editions
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Follow My Leader
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Autumn Journal
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Masterpieces of F...
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Lark’s Recent Updates

Lark Benobi made a comment on Stacia’s review of Aphasia
Aphasia by Mauro Javier Cárdenas
" It makes me happy to know you loved this 😃 "
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Ponary Diary, 1941 - 1943 by Kazimierz Sakowicz
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Quarry by Jane White
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Follow My Leader by James B. Garfield
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Autumn Journal by Louis MacNeice
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Lark Benobi made a comment on their review of Women Talking
Women Talking by Miriam Toews
" C wrote: "I'm reading the wonderful 'Poor Deer' now, and was wondering if you had read any Toews! Maybe not this one specifically... 'Fight Night' is ...more "
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Lost on Me by Veronica Raimo
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Planet of Clay by Samar Yazbek
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Women Talking by Miriam Toews
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Top-heavy and overlong, and with too many reveals in the last flurry of pages, and not at all convincing as fiction, but you know, I still thought it was marvelous, in the way the stage play/movie Twelve Angry Men is marvelous. The novel reminded me ...more
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Brodeck by Philippe Claudel
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Quotes by Lark Benobi  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“I am a mammal, a dog, and a bichon frise--in that order.”
Lark Benobi

“It was a town mostly populated with elderly John Wayne fans and their caregivers.”
Lark Benobi, The Book of Dog

“All of you losers, the Great Woolly Mammoth said. The undocumented and disabled. The forgotten ones. The left behinds. The last will be first. It's our turn. All of you need to fight together, every which way you can, and then some, and then some more, and even after you do all that, you will probably fail, and then die.”
Lark Benobi

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Topics Mentioning This Author

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Read Women: This topic has been closed to new comments. Women Author Challenge 2018 33 181 Nov 15, 2018 08:42AM  
2024 Reading Chal...: The TBR Jar Challenge - 2018 613 1850 May 31, 2019 07:44PM  
Book Riot's Read ...: Double Dippers 95 1221 Dec 02, 2019 07:16PM  
“These are the days that must happen to you.”
Walt Whitman

“Then, for a moment, silence dominates the path to the summit of Everest. If the furious race of monsoon winds blasting the outlines of the Nepalese mountain range can be considered silence.”
Sebastián Martínez Daniell, Two Sherpas

“I learn more from books than from people”
William Sleator, The Beasties

“Time moves sideways through the most important moments of our lives.”
Claire Oshetsky, Poor Deer

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Comments (showing 1-5)    post a comment »
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message 5: by jana

jana Thank You for accepting Lark, I am looking forward to your book choices and reviews. :)


message 4: by Lark

Lark Benobi Elena C. wrote: "Cursed Bunny feels like a great way to meet 😁"

yah!

I related to your comment about horror being repackaged as something deeper--as if being 'horror' isn't 'something deeper' all on its own--because I just wrote a horror novel about a woman who gives birth to an owl, and people tend to read all kinds of things into it, some of which I have trouble justifying


Elena Cursed Bunny feels like a great way to meet 😁


message 2: by Lark

Lark Benobi Majenta wrote: "Hello, Lark! Thank you for contacting me! I hope you are keeping as safe and well and possible and will have a great new week. Congratulations on your book! Happy reading, writing, and everything else..."

Majenta, thanks for this sweet message! I've never read THE EVERLASTING STORY OF NORY and now I will--thanks! I see you've read Erich Kästner, too. I do love his children's books and they have a similar sweetness. I'm a big fan of middle grade fiction, more so than YA, because of the sweetness found in so many books in that category. I see you read a William Sleator book--House of Stairs--a while ago. I loved them all. All best to you in the coming week and beyond!


Majenta Hello, Lark! Thank you for contacting me! I hope you are keeping as safe and well and possible and will have a great new week. Congratulations on your book! Happy reading, writing, and everything else. I have just recently read Totto-Chan; it was recommended to me by someone else here, and I'm very glad! I got it for my Kindle and was surprised that the story ended at--60% or 70%? and the rest was some of the passages in Japanese. When I realized that, I was very glad of it. The book reminded me of THE EVERLASTING STORY OF NORY by Nicholson Baker, so I recommended it to the person who had recommended TOTTO-CHAN to me, so now I'm re-reading NORY. Have you ever heard of it?
Good to meet you, have a good day and all the best for whatever you're working on at the moment. Blessings!
Best wishes from Majenta


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