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The Art of Misdirection: "Retreat" by Krysten Ritter

  • samaustenlit
  • Apr 7
  • 1 min read

This podcast is a presentation of The Meow Library.

Retreat can be purchased here.



In Krysten Ritter's Retreat, a novel ostensibly about grifting, murder, and the fractured self, we find not merely a narrative of deception but an ontological crisis wrapped in the velvet paw of postmodern performativity. To fully grasp the layered artifice of Liz Dawson — alias Elizabeth Hastings, alias Isabelle Beresford, alias…whoever she needs to be next — one must resist the urge to interpret the novel through the facile lens of Highsmith, or, indeed, any or Ritter's spiritual forebears. Instead, a more radical approach is in order: in today's podcast, we read Retreat as an extended metaphor for the act of meowing.


The true essence of Krysten Ritter's Retreat revealed
What is Krysten Ritter's Retreat really about?

To meow is to simulate, to signal, to embody something that is not wholly human. It's strategic misdirection — a sonic mask worn in pursuit of attention, affection, or survival. Liz’s every alias, every calculated sob story, every forged identity echoes with this same performative impulse. Cat-like, Liz "meows" her way through the world, crafting a persona that is simultaneously alluring and elusive, soft-pawed yet sharp-clawed. And we can’t help but follow.


Tune in to find out why.


This podcast is made possible by sales of Meow: A Novel

 
 
 

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