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Rikki Ducornet

Rikki Ducornet (/ˈrɪki dkɔːrˈn/; born Erica DeGre; April 19, 1943)[1][2] is an American writer, poet, and artist. Her work has been described as “linguistically explosive and socially relevant,”[3] and praised for “deploy[ing] tactics familiar to the historical avant-garde, including an emphasis on gnosticism, cosmology, diablerie, bestiary, eroticism, and revolution, to produce an astounding body of work, cogent and ethical in its beauty and spirit.”[4]

Rikki Ducornet
Ducornet
BornErica DeGre
(1943-04-19) April 19, 1943 (age 79)
Canton, New York, United States
Occupation
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
Alma materBard College
Period1984–present
SubjectSexuality, religion
Literary movementSurrealism, postmodernism
Website
www.rikkiducornet.com

Biography

Rikki Ducornet was born in Canton, New York. Gerard DeGré, Ducornet's father, was a professor of social philosophy, and her mother Muriel hosted community-interest programs on radio and television.[5] Ducornet was raised in a multicultural household as her father was Cuban and her mother was Russian-Jewish.[6] Ducornet's father encouraged her to read books by authors such as Albert Camus and Lao Tzu, and to pursue an exploration of knowledge.[6] Alice in Wonderland was an especially formative book, and inspired her 1993 novel The Jade Cabinet, in which Lewis Carroll is a major character. Ducornet's father also taught her rumba at the age of ten.[6] Ducornet spent part of her childhood in Egypt, the setting for her 2003 novel Gazelle, after her father received an invitation to teach at the University of Cairo.[7] Ducornet also spent two years in Algeria in the mid-1960s after the Algerian war of Independence.[7]

Ducornet grew up on the campus of Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, in New York, earning a B.A. in Fine Arts there in 1964.[8] While at Bard she met Robert Coover and Robert Kelly, two authors who shared Ducornet's fascination with metamorphosis and provided early models of how fiction might express this interest. In 1972 she moved to the Loire Valley in France with her then husband, Guy Ducornet, where she lived for the next eighteen years. As a young girl, Ducornet dreamed of being a visual artist and it wasn't until she moved to France with her husband that she began to seriously think about writing.[6] Being in Europe brought out something new: as Ducornet explained, “I was acutely aware of language”.[6] It was in France too, that she raised her son, Jean-Yves Ducornet, who later became a noted composer/arranger/producer.[9] In 1988 she won a Bunting Institute fellowship at Radcliffe, and in 1989 accepted a teaching position in the English Department at the University of Denver.[10] In 2007, she replaced retired Dr. Ernest Gaines as Writer in Residence at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.[11] Ducornet currently lives in Port Townsend, Washington.[12]

Ducornet claims to be the subject of the Steely Dan song "Rikki Don't Lose That Number."[13] Steely Dan singer Donald Fagen had met her while both were attending Bard College.[13] Ducornet says they met at a college party, and even though she was married at the time, he gave her his number. Ducornet was intrigued by Fagen and was tempted to call him, but she decided against it. She later told an interviewer, "Philosophically it's an interesting song; I mean I think his 'number' is a cipher for the self."[14][15]

Writing

Ducornet is known for her writing characterized by motifs of nature, Eros, abusive authority, subversion, and the creative imagination.[16] Ducornet hand writes the drafts of her books with pen and ink and when writing, Ducornet does not begin with a set plot but rather derives her stories from the hearts of her subjects.[6] In Ducornet's first book, The Butcher’s Tales, she dealt with ideas of “conveying moral understanding, a visceral need to confront abusive Authority in its many forms, and to fully engage the beautiful”, all themes that reoccur in her later work.[17] In addition to being known as a writer, Ducornet also works in the mediums of painting and printmaking.[16] Ducornet has illustrated books by Jorge Luis Borges, Robert Coover, Forrest Gander, Kate Bernheimer, and Anne Waldman among others.[12] A collection of Ducornet's papers, including prints and drawings, are in the permanent collection of the Ohio State University Rare Books and Manuscripts Library,[12] with further papers at the University of California San Diego library. In 2017, Ducornet partnered with multimedia artist Margie McDonald in a collaborative installation show at the Northwind Arts Center in Port Townsend.[18] The show exhibited a series of 25 foot long painted scrolls hand painted by Ducornet and multimedia wire sculptures by Margie McDonald.[18] These scrolls were painted during a month long residency at the Vermont Studio Center prior to Ducornet and McDonald's collaboration.[18] Her art has also been exhibited in Amnesty International’s travelling exhibit “I Welcome,” in support of the world’s refugees.

Ducornet uses themes of nature and magic in many of her works. Ducornet’s Tetralogy of Elements was influenced by the ancient idea of the four elements: earth, fire, water, and air. Each of the four elements are featured in The Stain (1984), Entering Fire (1986), The Fountains of Neptune (1989), and The Jade Cabinet (1993), respectively. Ducornet’s book Phosphor In Dreamland, is sometimes included alongside the original tetralogy as presenting a fifth element, being light or dream.[19]

Ducornet was influenced by surrealism and has written about the movement. She wrote the foreword to Penelope Rosemont’s Surrealist Experiences: 1001 Dawns, 221 Midnights (Black Swan Press, 2000). In addition, Ducornet is a contributor to (on “Imagination”) and the subject of an entry in the three-volume International Encyclopedia of Surrealism; for her entry in the latter, Ducornet told critic Michelle Ryan-Sautour that she did not know “what it means to ‘do’ surrealism. I do know, however, that my process is informed by, energized by, sparked . . . by memory, dreams, reflection AND HAZARD and intuition, EROS above all. . . . Surrealism has been an embodiment of some kind, a luminous . . . haunting. It is the name of the country where I was born.”[20]

Awards

Bibliography

Novels
Short fiction collections
  • The Butcher's Tales (1980)
  • The Complete Butcher's Tales (1994)[22]
  • The Word 'Desire' (1997)
  • The One Marvelous Thing (2008)
Poetry
  • From The Star Chamber (as "Rikki") Fiddlehead Poetry Books, Fredericton NB (1974)
  • Wild Geraniums Actual Size Press, London (1975)
  • Bouche a Bouche by Guy Ducornet & Rikki, Soror, Paris (1975)
  • Weird Sisters (as "Rikki") Intermedia, Vancouver (1976)
  • Knife Notebook (as "Rikki") Fiddlehead Poetry Books, Vancouver (1977)
  • The Illustrated Universe (as "Rikki") Aya Press, Toronto (1979)
  • The Cult of Seizure The Porcupine's Quill, Erin, Ontario (1989)
Essays
  • The Monstrous and the Marvelous City Lights, San Francisco (1999)
  • The Deep Zoo Coffee House Press, Minneapolis (2015)
Anthologies edited
  • Shoes & Shit: Stories for Pedestrians edited by Geoff Hancock & Rikki Ducornet, Aya Press, Toronto (1984)
Children's books
Illustrations

Further reading

  • Evenson, Brian. “Reading Rikki Ducornet.” CONTEXT no. 22 (2008): 6-7.
  • Forester, G. N. and M. J. Nicholls, eds.Rikki Ducornet. Festschrift Volume 4. Singapore: Verbivoracious Press, 2015.
  • Innes, Charlotte. “Through the Looking-Glass.” Nation, 6 June 1994, 809-12.
  • Moore, Steven. “Publishing Rikki Ducornet.” In My Back Pages: Reviews and Essays. Los Angeles: Zerogram Press, 2017.
  • Nikiel, Julia. “Airing The Jade Cabinet: Aerial Imagination in Rikki Ducornet’s Fourth Elemental Novel.” Roczniki Humanistycze 67.11 (2019): 109-20.
  • Nikiel, Julia. “Drowning in Rikki Ducornet’s The Fountains of Neptune”, Fafnir: Nordic Journal of Science Fiction and Fantasy Research 2.2 (2015): 19-33.
  • Noheden, Kristoffer. “Magic Language, Esoteric Nature: Rikki Ducornet’s Surrealistic Ecology.” in Surrealist Women’s Writing: A Critical Exploration, ed. Anna Watz. Manchester University Press, 2021.
  • Praet, Stijn, and Anna Kérchys, eds. The Fairy-Tale Vanguard: Literary Self-Consciousness in a Marvelous Genre. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2019.
  • Resnick, Rachel. “A Conversation with Rikki Ducornet.” In The World Within, ed. Portland: Tin House Books, 2007, 123-40.
  • Richard Powers/Rikki Ducornet Issue. Review of Contemporary Fiction 18.3 (Fall 1998): 110-230.
  • Trendel, Aristi. “Rikki Ducornet Revisits Hawthorne: The Stain or a Time for ‘Sexts.’” Baltic Journal of English Language, Literature and Culture 3 (2013): 96–108.

References

  1. ^ Gregory, Sinda (1998). "Finding a Language: Introducing Rikki Ducornet". The Review of Contemporary Fiction: 110.
  2. ^ Something about the Author. Gale Research. 1975. ISBN 978-0-8103-0062-0.
  3. ^ "Ducornet Reading". The Tuscaloosa News. Dec 2, 2004. Retrieved April 17, 2021.
  4. ^ Joseph Houlihan, “Cosmic Rebellion in Traffik
  5. ^ Love, Barbara J. (1970). Foremost Women in Communications: A Biographical Reference Work on Accomplished Women in Broadcasting, Publishing, Advertising, Public Relations, and Allied Professions. Foremost Americans Publishing Corporation. ISBN 978-0-8352-0414-9.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Paz, Diane Urbani de la (2011-04-24). "PENINSULA WOMAN: Prolific Port Townsend artist, writer Rikki Ducornet explores transformation". Peninsula Daily News. Retrieved 2019-03-04.
  7. ^ a b david (2016-07-20). "Rikki Ducornet : Brightfellow". Between The Covers. Retrieved 2019-03-04.
  8. ^ Ducornet, "Class of '64," in Rikki Ducornet, ed. G. N. Forester and M. J. Nicholls (Singapore: Verbivoracious Press, 2015), p. 85
  9. ^ I Am Jeeve. He has been nominated for a Grammy three times, and won once.
  10. ^ Gregory, Sindra. "Finding a Language: Introducing Rikki Ducornet" The Review of Contemporary Fiction Fall 1998.
  11. ^ "Writers-in-Residence". 1 September 2017. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  12. ^ a b c "Rikki Ducornet". Lannan Foundation. Retrieved 2019-03-04.
  13. ^ a b McCormack, J.W. (May 20, 2016). "The Burden of Strangeness: Rikki Ducornet". PWxyz, LLC. Retrieved December 12, 2019.
  14. ^ "The story behind Steely Dan song 'Rikki Don't Lose That Number'". 2021-10-02. Retrieved 2022-01-29.
  15. ^ Steven Moore, "Reveries of Desire: An Interview with Rikki Ducornet," Bloomsbury Review, January/February 1998, rpt. in The VIP Annual 2016 (Singapore: Verbivoracious Press, 2016), p. 89. In a later email to Moore (18 December 2021), Ducornet added: "I do think of it as a koan for the self: maybe Fagen intuited that at the time we met I was, indeed, losing MY number."
  16. ^ a b "rikki ducornet". rikki ducornet. Retrieved 2019-03-04.
  17. ^ "INTERVIEW I Rikki Ducornet by The Editors | The Doctor T. J. Eckleburg Review". Eckleburg. 2015-01-30. Retrieved 2019-03-04.
  18. ^ a b c "CRAZY HAPPY: Painted Scrolls by Rikki Ducornet & Sculpture by Margie McDonald". Numéro Cinq. 2016-07-05. Retrieved 2019-03-04.
  19. ^ Watz, Anna (2021-01-12). Surrealist women's writing: A critical exploration. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-1-5261-3204-8.
  20. ^ The International Encyclopedia of Surrealism (Bloomsbury, 2019), vol. 2, p. 249.
  21. ^ a b Sleeman, Elizabeth, ed. (2004) [1934]. International Who's Who of Authors and Writers (19th ed.). Europa Publications. p. 151. ISBN 1-85743-1790. ISSN 1740-018X.
  22. ^ The Dalkey Archive paperback edition of 1999 added two new stories, "Egyptian Gum" and "The New Zoo."
  23. ^ Bernheimer, Kate (24 August 2010). "Horse, Flower, Bird". Coffee House Press. Retrieved 2 October 2017 – via Amazon.

External links

  • Author's website
  • Interview with Rikki Ducornet in Big Other
  • Interview with Rikki Ducornet ultoday.com
  • Interview at the Dalkey Archive

rikki, ducornet, ɔːr, born, erica, degre, april, 1943, american, writer, poet, artist, work, been, described, linguistically, explosive, socially, relevant, praised, deploy, tactics, familiar, historical, avant, garde, including, emphasis, gnosticism, cosmolog. Rikki Ducornet ˈ r ɪ k i d uː k ɔːr ˈ n eɪ born Erica DeGre April 19 1943 1 2 is an American writer poet and artist Her work has been described as linguistically explosive and socially relevant 3 and praised for deploy ing tactics familiar to the historical avant garde including an emphasis on gnosticism cosmology diablerie bestiary eroticism and revolution to produce an astounding body of work cogent and ethical in its beauty and spirit 4 Rikki DucornetDucornetBornErica DeGre 1943 04 19 April 19 1943 age 79 Canton New York United StatesOccupationNovelist poet illustratorLanguageEnglishNationalityAmericanAlma materBard CollegePeriod1984 presentSubjectSexuality religionLiterary movementSurrealism postmodernismWebsitewww wbr rikkiducornet wbr com Contents 1 Biography 2 Writing 3 Awards 4 Bibliography 5 Further reading 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditRikki Ducornet was born in Canton New York Gerard DeGre Ducornet s father was a professor of social philosophy and her mother Muriel hosted community interest programs on radio and television 5 Ducornet was raised in a multicultural household as her father was Cuban and her mother was Russian Jewish 6 Ducornet s father encouraged her to read books by authors such as Albert Camus and Lao Tzu and to pursue an exploration of knowledge 6 Alice in Wonderland was an especially formative book and inspired her 1993 novel The Jade Cabinet in which Lewis Carroll is a major character Ducornet s father also taught her rumba at the age of ten 6 Ducornet spent part of her childhood in Egypt the setting for her 2003 novel Gazelle after her father received an invitation to teach at the University of Cairo 7 Ducornet also spent two years in Algeria in the mid 1960s after the Algerian war of Independence 7 Ducornet grew up on the campus of Bard College in Annandale on Hudson in New York earning a B A in Fine Arts there in 1964 8 While at Bard she met Robert Coover and Robert Kelly two authors who shared Ducornet s fascination with metamorphosis and provided early models of how fiction might express this interest In 1972 she moved to the Loire Valley in France with her then husband Guy Ducornet where she lived for the next eighteen years As a young girl Ducornet dreamed of being a visual artist and it wasn t until she moved to France with her husband that she began to seriously think about writing 6 Being in Europe brought out something new as Ducornet explained I was acutely aware of language 6 It was in France too that she raised her son Jean Yves Ducornet who later became a noted composer arranger producer 9 In 1988 she won a Bunting Institute fellowship at Radcliffe and in 1989 accepted a teaching position in the English Department at the University of Denver 10 In 2007 she replaced retired Dr Ernest Gaines as Writer in Residence at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette 11 Ducornet currently lives in Port Townsend Washington 12 Ducornet claims to be the subject of the Steely Dan song Rikki Don t Lose That Number 13 Steely Dan singer Donald Fagen had met her while both were attending Bard College 13 Ducornet says they met at a college party and even though she was married at the time he gave her his number Ducornet was intrigued by Fagen and was tempted to call him but she decided against it She later told an interviewer Philosophically it s an interesting song I mean I think his number is a cipher for the self 14 15 Writing EditDucornet is known for her writing characterized by motifs of nature Eros abusive authority subversion and the creative imagination 16 Ducornet hand writes the drafts of her books with pen and ink and when writing Ducornet does not begin with a set plot but rather derives her stories from the hearts of her subjects 6 In Ducornet s first book The Butcher s Tales she dealt with ideas of conveying moral understanding a visceral need to confront abusive Authority in its many forms and to fully engage the beautiful all themes that reoccur in her later work 17 In addition to being known as a writer Ducornet also works in the mediums of painting and printmaking 16 Ducornet has illustrated books by Jorge Luis Borges Robert Coover Forrest Gander Kate Bernheimer and Anne Waldman among others 12 A collection of Ducornet s papers including prints and drawings are in the permanent collection of the Ohio State University Rare Books and Manuscripts Library 12 with further papers at the University of California San Diego library In 2017 Ducornet partnered with multimedia artist Margie McDonald in a collaborative installation show at the Northwind Arts Center in Port Townsend 18 The show exhibited a series of 25 foot long painted scrolls hand painted by Ducornet and multimedia wire sculptures by Margie McDonald 18 These scrolls were painted during a month long residency at the Vermont Studio Center prior to Ducornet and McDonald s collaboration 18 Her art has also been exhibited in Amnesty International s travelling exhibit I Welcome in support of the world s refugees Ducornet uses themes of nature and magic in many of her works Ducornet s Tetralogy of Elements was influenced by the ancient idea of the four elements earth fire water and air Each of the four elements are featured in The Stain 1984 Entering Fire 1986 The Fountains of Neptune 1989 and The Jade Cabinet 1993 respectively Ducornet s book Phosphor In Dreamland is sometimes included alongside the original tetralogy as presenting a fifth element being light or dream 19 Ducornet was influenced by surrealism and has written about the movement She wrote the foreword to Penelope Rosemont s Surrealist Experiences 1001 Dawns 221 Midnights Black Swan Press 2000 In addition Ducornet is a contributor to on Imagination and the subject of an entry in the three volume International Encyclopedia of Surrealism for her entry in the latter Ducornet told critic Michelle Ryan Sautour that she did not know what it means to do surrealism I do know however that my process is informed by energized by sparked by memory dreams reflection AND HAZARD and intuition EROS above all Surrealism has been an embodiment of some kind a luminous haunting It is the name of the country where I was born 20 Awards EditArts and Letters Award in Literature American Academy of Arts and Letters 2008 Lannan Literary Award for Fiction 2004 Charles Flint Kellogg Award in Arts and Letters 1998 21 Critics Choice Award 1995 21 Lannan Literary Award for Fiction 1993 Bibliography EditNovelsThe Elements tetralogy The Stain Chatto amp Windus London 1984 Grove Press New York 1984 revised edition Dalkey Archive Press Normal IL 1995 Entering Fire Chatto amp Windus London 1986 City Lights San Francisco 1986 The Fountains of Neptune McClelland amp Steward Toronto 1989 Dalkey Archive Press Normal Illinois 1992 The Jade Cabinet Dalkey Archive Press Normal Illinois 1993 Phosphor in Dreamland Dalkey Archive Press Normal Illinois 1995 The Fan Maker s Inquisition Henry Holt New York 1999 Gazelle Alfred A Knopf New York 2003 Netsuke a novel Coffee House Press Minneapolis 2011 Brightfellow a novel Coffee House Press Minneapolis 2016 Trafik A Novel in Warp Drive Coffee House Press Minneapolis 2021 Short fiction collectionsThe Butcher s Tales 1980 The Complete Butcher s Tales 1994 22 The Word Desire 1997 The One Marvelous Thing 2008 PoetryFrom The Star Chamber as Rikki Fiddlehead Poetry Books Fredericton NB 1974 Wild Geraniums Actual Size Press London 1975 Bouche a Bouche by Guy Ducornet amp Rikki Soror Paris 1975 Weird Sisters as Rikki Intermedia Vancouver 1976 Knife Notebook as Rikki Fiddlehead Poetry Books Vancouver 1977 The Illustrated Universe as Rikki Aya Press Toronto 1979 The Cult of Seizure The Porcupine s Quill Erin Ontario 1989 EssaysThe Monstrous and the Marvelous City Lights San Francisco 1999 The Deep Zoo Coffee House Press Minneapolis 2015 Anthologies editedShoes amp Shit Stories for Pedestrians edited by Geoff Hancock amp Rikki Ducornet Aya Press Toronto 1984 Children s booksThe Blue Bird Adaptation of Mme D Aulnoy s old French fairy tale Alfred A Knopf New York 1970 Shazira Shazam and the Devil by Erica and Guy Ducornet Prentice Hall Englewood Cliffs New Jersey 1972 IllustrationsSpanking the Maid by Robert Coover 1981 Tlon Uqbar Orbis Tertius by Jorge Luis Borges 1983 Torn Wings and Faux Pas by Karen Elizabeth Gordon 1997 Horse Flower Bird by Kate Bernheimer 2010 23 Further reading EditEvenson Brian Reading Rikki Ducornet CONTEXT no 22 2008 6 7 Forester G N and M J Nicholls eds Rikki Ducornet Festschrift Volume 4 Singapore Verbivoracious Press 2015 Innes Charlotte Through the Looking Glass Nation 6 June 1994 809 12 Moore Steven Publishing Rikki Ducornet In My Back Pages Reviews and Essays Los Angeles Zerogram Press 2017 Nikiel Julia Airing The Jade Cabinet Aerial Imagination in Rikki Ducornet s Fourth Elemental Novel Roczniki Humanistycze 67 11 2019 109 20 Nikiel Julia Drowning in Rikki Ducornet s The Fountains of Neptune Fafnir Nordic Journal of Science Fiction and Fantasy Research 2 2 2015 19 33 Noheden Kristoffer Magic Language Esoteric Nature Rikki Ducornet s Surrealistic Ecology in Surrealist Women s Writing A Critical Exploration ed Anna Watz Manchester University Press 2021 Praet Stijn and Anna Kerchys eds The Fairy Tale Vanguard Literary Self Consciousness in a Marvelous Genre Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2019 Resnick Rachel A Conversation with Rikki Ducornet In The World Within ed Portland Tin House Books 2007 123 40 Richard Powers Rikki Ducornet Issue Review of Contemporary Fiction 18 3 Fall 1998 110 230 Trendel Aristi Rikki Ducornet Revisits Hawthorne The Stain or a Time for Sexts Baltic Journal of English Language Literature and Culture 3 2013 96 108 References Edit Gregory Sinda 1998 Finding a Language Introducing Rikki Ducornet The Review of Contemporary Fiction 110 Something about the Author Gale Research 1975 ISBN 978 0 8103 0062 0 Ducornet Reading The Tuscaloosa News Dec 2 2004 Retrieved April 17 2021 Joseph Houlihan Cosmic Rebellion in Traffik Love Barbara J 1970 Foremost Women in Communications A Biographical Reference Work on Accomplished Women in Broadcasting Publishing Advertising Public Relations and Allied Professions Foremost Americans Publishing Corporation ISBN 978 0 8352 0414 9 a b c d e f Paz Diane Urbani de la 2011 04 24 PENINSULA WOMAN Prolific Port Townsend artist writer Rikki Ducornet explores transformation Peninsula Daily News Retrieved 2019 03 04 a b david 2016 07 20 Rikki Ducornet Brightfellow Between The Covers Retrieved 2019 03 04 Ducornet Class of 64 in Rikki Ducornet ed G N Forester and M J Nicholls Singapore Verbivoracious Press 2015 p 85 I Am Jeeve He has been nominated for a Grammy three times and won once Gregory Sindra Finding a Language Introducing Rikki Ducornet The Review of Contemporary Fiction Fall 1998 Writers in Residence 1 September 2017 Retrieved 2 October 2017 a b c Rikki Ducornet Lannan Foundation Retrieved 2019 03 04 a b McCormack J W May 20 2016 The Burden of Strangeness Rikki Ducornet PWxyz LLC Retrieved December 12 2019 The story behind Steely Dan song Rikki Don t Lose That Number 2021 10 02 Retrieved 2022 01 29 Steven Moore Reveries of Desire An Interview with Rikki Ducornet Bloomsbury Review January February 1998 rpt in The VIP Annual 2016 Singapore Verbivoracious Press 2016 p 89 In a later email to Moore 18 December 2021 Ducornet added I do think of it as a koan for the self maybe Fagen intuited that at the time we met I was indeed losing MY number a b rikki ducornet rikki ducornet Retrieved 2019 03 04 INTERVIEW I Rikki Ducornet by The Editors The Doctor T J Eckleburg Review Eckleburg 2015 01 30 Retrieved 2019 03 04 a b c CRAZY HAPPY Painted Scrolls by Rikki Ducornet amp Sculpture by Margie McDonald Numero Cinq 2016 07 05 Retrieved 2019 03 04 Watz Anna 2021 01 12 Surrealist women s writing A critical exploration Manchester University Press ISBN 978 1 5261 3204 8 The International Encyclopedia of Surrealism Bloomsbury 2019 vol 2 p 249 a b Sleeman Elizabeth ed 2004 1934 International Who s Who of Authors and Writers 19th ed Europa Publications p 151 ISBN 1 85743 1790 ISSN 1740 018X The Dalkey Archive paperback edition of 1999 added two new stories Egyptian Gum and The New Zoo Bernheimer Kate 24 August 2010 Horse Flower Bird Coffee House Press Retrieved 2 October 2017 via Amazon External links EditAuthor s website Interview with Rikki Ducornet in Big Other Interview with Rikki Ducornet ultoday com Interview at the Dalkey Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rikki Ducornet amp oldid 1131209140, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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