Her second novel, Red Clocks (Little, Brown, 2018), was a national bestseller and winner of the Oregon Book Award in Fiction. It was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction[3] and the Neukom Institute Literary Arts Award for Speculative Fiction.[4]Naomi Alderman's review in The New York Times calls the novel "a lyrical and beautifully observed reflection on women's lives";[5]Ploughshares describes it as "a reckoning, a warning, and nothing short of a miracle";[6] and Maggie Nelson has said, "Red Clocks is funny, mordant, baroque, political, poetic, alarming, and inspiring—not to mention a way forward for fiction now."[7]Cleveland Review of Books said that the questions the book poses are the questions that Americans are asking today, as we look to a future where Roe v. Wade could be overturned.[8]
Farewell Navigator: Stories was published in 2008 by Open City. "If darkness has ever been your friend, your story is in here," said Miranda July of the collection.[17] A review in L.A. Weekly observed: "It's a rare writer who can bring us closer to people we might cross the street to avoid."[18]