Mary Gaitskill’s work is remarkable for its insights into the cruelties of life and for complex female characters struggling with taboos such as prostitution, addiction, and sadomasochism. The author of eight books, including the novel This Is Pleasure and the hybrid of fiction, memoir, essay, and art The Devil’s Treasure, Gaitskill received the Arts and Letters Award in Literature. The 2002 film Secretary is based on Gaitskill’s short story of the same name from the collection Bad Behavior. Gaitskill lives in New York.

Photograph by Hillary Harvey.

Mary Gaitskill

An Interview

with Suzanne Warren

Mary Gaitskill’s first story collection, Bad Behavior, gave readers and reviewers a prurient jolt with its cast of women turning tricks on New York street corners, druggies, sadomasochists, and twisted office sex, followed by bribed silence. But the decadence and corruption were ultimately less remarkable than the frank, unapologetic manner of the stories. In conversation, Gaitskill invokes Nabokov as an inspiration, and she creates her works much as he created his Lolita, with “no moral in tow.” She touches the cold, dark, dreadful edges of life with perfect humanity.

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