MOTHERs

[Rachel Zucker] ✓ MOTHERs ☆ Read Online eBook or Kindle ePUB. MOTHERs R. Aronson said I highly recommend.. A deeply compelling and provocative book. I highly recommend.. Amazingly inventive memoir Zuckers memoir about her lifelong search for mother figures in her life is ingenious, funny and painfully honest. She weaves together multiple story lines through a blizzard of fragmented thoughts, memories, readings. Somehow it feels more real to me than any other memoir I have read. She captures the complexity of relationships (with parents, kids, mentors, spouses) as

MOTHERs

Author :
Rating : 4.85 (642 Votes)
Asin : 1933996439
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 164 Pages
Publish Date : 2013-05-15
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

"MOTHERs is a howling storm of a book. In mythic terms, the essay is about a poet who doesn't want to turn into a storyteller. But as in all myths of avoidance, Zucker must eventually tell a terrifyingly inevitable story."—Sarah Manguso. Zucker turns her intelligent eye outward and inward, including everything she knows about mothers, stories, poems, and consequence itself. Literary Nonfiction. In this desperately digressive essay, the poet Rachel Zucker narrates her complicated path to becoming and not becoming her mother, the storyteller Diane Wolkstein

A graduate of Yale and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, Zucker teaches at NYU and the 92nd Street Y. Rachel Zucker is the author of THE PEDESTRIANS (Wave Books, 2014), MOTHERS (Counterpath, 2013), and MUSEUM OF ACCIDENTS (Wave Books, 2009), which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. She is also the author of The Bad Wife Handbook (Wesleyan University, 2007), The Last Clear Narrative (Wesleyan University, 2004), Eating in the Underworld<

R. Aronson said I highly recommend.. A deeply compelling and provocative book. I highly recommend.. Amazingly inventive memoir Zucker's memoir about her lifelong search for mother figures in her life is ingenious, funny and painfully honest. She weaves together multiple story lines through a blizzard of fragmented thoughts, memories, readings. Somehow it feels more real to me than any other memoir I have read. She captures the complexity of relationships (with parents, kids, mentors, spouses) as well as any writ. Adam said Incredible. Really beyond words. Stunning. Challenging. Brilliant. Brave. I'm not one of those people who stays up all night to finish a book, and then who can't sleep after finishing it. At least, I never before called myself that kind of person until I read Rachel Zucker's MOTHERs.

She currently lives in NYC with her husband and three sons and was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship in 2012. She is also the author of The Bad Wife Handbook (Wesleyan University, 2007), The Last Clear Narrative (Wesleyan University, 2004), Eating in the Underworld (Wesleyan University, 2003), and Annunciation (The Center for Book Arts, 2002), as well as the co-editor (with Arielle Greenberg) of Starting Today: 100 Poems for Obama's First 100 Days and Women Poets on Mentorship: Efforts and Affections (both from the University of Iowa Press). She is co-author (also with Arielle Greenberg) of HOME/BIRTH: A POEMIC (1913 Press, 2010), a nonfiction book about birth, friendship, and feminism. About the Author Rachel Zucker is the author of THE PEDESTRIANS (Wave Books, 2014), MOTHERS (Counterpath,