upper waypoint
Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

About “Flores”
Julie says, “Last summer I dreamed I was standing in the glass-walled hallway of my house, which looked out onto a thick forest, and I saw this baby sitting on the floor — not a human child, but a child belonging to the species of tiny hominids that lived thousands of years ago on the Indonesian island of Flores. When I went to pick up the child, I saw its parents standing at the edge of the woods — they’d left the child with me because they were being hunted by humans. I woke up and told my husband about the dream, and he suggested I turn it into a short story. I’ve never written a story from a dream before, but I gave it a shot. The story changed in the telling — the protagonist isn’t me, but a woman whose last child is going off to college, and the Flores people make their presence known more subtly at first — but, like the dream, the story addresses the blurring of the boundaries between town and wilderness, between human will and biological impulse, between hunter and hunted.”

Sponsored

lower waypoint
next waypoint
The Stud, SF's Oldest Queer Bar, Gears Up for a Grand ReopeningHow a Dumpling Chef Brought Dim Sum to Bay Area Farmers MarketsThis Sleek Taiwanese Street Food Lounge Serves Beef Noodle Soup Until 2:30 a.m.Minnie Bell’s New Soul Food Restaurant in the Fillmore Is a HomecomingSFMOMA Workers Urge the Museum to Support Palestinians in an Open LetterOutside Lands 2024: Tyler, the Creator, The Killers and Sturgill Simpson HeadlineYou Can Get Free Ice Cream on Tuesday — No CatchLarry June to Headline Stanford's Free Blackfest5 New Mysteries and Thrillers for Your Nightstand This SpringA ‘Haunted Mansion’ Once Stood Directly Under Sutro Tower