As I said in first place, I thought my answer would be negative because Mary Gaitskill writes about uncommon and personal topics like sex, and although I say that is an uncommon and a personal topic, actually it is not, because sex makes part of all people.
Perceptive: Guao! I liked a lot a part of a story when through a character Mary talks about the ugly world of Hollywood, she is very perceptive at this moment, because everybody thinks Hollywood is amazing but she writes about the superficial and horrible of this path. “He found Hollywood too horrible to bear. “the vanity... the falsity it's so base. You lose everything, you turn into this creature”
She narrates the life of people around the culture of sex. Writing is freedom, so Mary is able to say things nobody dares to say, because sex is a “taboo”.
Mary abandoned the control and then she wrote, wrote about herself, about people she knows or she knew, about her experience, and about what she imagined of her life, but she used other voices and she caught all those things into different characters.
What I want to say is that she wrote about the terrible life and there are cultural forces that drive us to some places or situations. Crhisthian Diaz Calderon.
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