Recensione:
"Short, easily digestible chapters. [Gerber] also includes clear, black-and-white close-ups of her affected breast during various stages of treatment, among other images.... The featured photographs of the author make this one stand out among the pack." -Library Journal http://reviews.libraryjournal.com/2016/08/books/nonfic/sci-tech/fighting-for-the-future-seven-titles-for-october-breast-cancer-awareness-month/ "An intimate, touching, moving portrait of the self in peril and in pain, written with characteristic intelligence and lucidity by Merrill Joan Gerber." -Joyce Carol Oates, author of Soul at the White Heat and Winner of the National Humanities Award "I've read a lot of breast cancer books, but [Merrill Joan Gerber's] is so fresh, so endearing, there's nothing else like it." -Judy Blume, author of Are you There, God? It's Me, Margaret, and In the Unlikely Event "Horror, humor, humaneness, fear, fatigue, love, honesty, bravery, and so much more, including even charm-all movingly mingled." -Cynthia Ozick, author of Critics, Monsters, Fanatics, and other Literary Essays "Richly provocative reading. And in the hands of a gifted and insightful writer with a penchant for the humorously quotidian, those negotiations are at once profound and entirely accessible." -Lynn Stegner, author of For All the Obvious Reasons "Merrill Joan Gerber is one of the finest writers of our time. There is no way to stop reading this very moving, compelling, sad but affirmative memoir. Whatever she touches, she illuminates." -David Evanier, author of Woody: The Biography
L'autore:
Merrill Joan Gerber is a prize-winning novelist and short story writer who has published ten novels--among them King of The World, which won the Pushcart Press Editors’ Book Award for “an important and unusual book of literary distinction,” and The Kingdom of Brooklyn, winner of the Ribalow Award from Hadassah Magazine for “the best English-language book of fiction on a Jewish theme”--as well as seven volumes of short stories, nine young-adult novels, and three books of nonfiction.Her short fiction has appeared in the New Yorker, the Atlantic, Mademoiselle, Ladies’ Home Journal, and Good Housekeeping. Redbook magazine published forty-two of her stories, a record for any author. She has also published in literary journals such as the Sewanee Review, Prairie Schooner, Shenandoah, Salmagundi, the Chattahoochee Review and the Virginia Quarterly Review. Her story, “I Don’t Believe This,” won an O. Henry Prize. She has published essays in Commentary, the Sewanee Review, and the Writer. She earned her MA in English from Brandeis University and was awarded a Wallace Stegner Fiction Fellowship to Stanford University. She presently teaches fiction writing at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California.Author’s Prior Titles: King of The World, The Kingdom of Brooklyn
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