The Eighth Moon: A Memoir of Belonging and Rebellion

Available
Product Details
Price
$18.00  $16.74
Publisher
Milkweed Editions
Publish Date
Pages
304
Dimensions
5.5 X 8.4 X 1.0 inches | 1.0 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781639550685

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Jennifer Kabat received an Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant for her criticism and has been published in BOMB and The Best American Essays. Her writing has also appeared in Granta, Frieze, Harper's, McSweeney's, The Believer, Virginia Quarterly Review, Los Angeles Review of Books, The New York Review, and The White Review. A finalist for the essay prize at Notting Hill Editions, she often collaborates with artists. She's part of the core faculty in the Design Research MA at the School of Visual Arts. An apprentice herbalist, she lives in rural Upstate New York and serves on her volunteer fire department.
Reviews
Praise for The Eighth Moon "Kabat traces her journey through the archives; outlines her experience making a home in Margaretville as she befriends locals; and issues abundant literary reflections on such writers as Elizabeth Hardwick and Adrienne Rich. [. . .] an introspective investigation of the interplay between writing, history, and political action."--Publishers Weekly
"Beautifully written, The Eighth Moon uses a very light touch to probe the most essential, unresolvable questions of belief, kinship, fidelity, history, identity. It's one of the most remarkable, original books I've read in a long time."--Chris Kraus, author of Summer of Hate"The Eighth Moon is infused with attention for the lands and art and bodies of the world. Reading it gave me moral stamina. Jennifer Kabat is a capacious and humane writer, and this book is required reading for anyone who wishes to live a principled life in a modern world."--Emmanuel Iduma, author of I Am Still with You "A mesmerizing debut that dares us to reimagine our relationship to time, place, and history. In this gripping book-length essay, chronologies converge when Jennifer Kabat finds herself in a rural county of the ancient Catskill Mountains 'where the land itself holds time' a nineteen century socialist uprising, a twentieth century movement of rural cooperatives, and a twenty-first century reckoning with the rising tide of facism, each offering unexpected echoes with one another's emergencies. In prose that glides with poetic precision, Kabat's personal narrative is webbed into this vortex as she situates herself in the broader story of Delaware County, cutting between the modernist hopes of her upbringing, the deathbeds of both her parents, and the shock of grief that shatters all previous understandings of time. Political and botanical textures emerge and remix as we roam through the last two centuries' populist seasons. The Eighth Moon moves with time-skipping logic, 'where the yet is always now, ' and where life is not a march of progress, but rather a circadian unfurling, dying back, going underground, and coming up again, slightly different. Kabat is both a stylist and a temporal magician. She cultivates a perspective that is as ethical as it is aesthetic because it provides a way of understanding ourselves not as main characters, but as dynamic collaborators with all that has happened, is happening, and will happen."--Adrian Shirk, author of Heaven Is a Place on Earth"Kabat is a rural flaneur, probing for exit from capitalist endgame in this psychogeographical memoir of the Catskills. As political time collapses the events of her study into the present day, mysterious doors open into the possibility of an encounter across history with every risk attached, including that of renewal of our most elusive faith in one another. This is a sublime book."--Jonathan Lethem, author of Brooklyn Crime Novel