Safe Suicide: Narratives, Essays, and Meditations

Available
Product Details
Price
$23.00  $21.39
Publisher
Red Hen Press
Publish Date
Pages
200
Dimensions
6.0 X 8.9 X 0.6 inches | 0.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781597091008
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author

Ploughshares, which DeWitt Henry directed for its first twenty years, and for which he received a Massachusetts Commonwealth Award in 1992, is regarded as one of the leading literary magazines in the country. Henry's novel, The Marriage of Anna Maye Potts, won the inaugural Peter Taylor Prize. Jack Smith wrote: "The novel evokes in the reader a sense for the power of the heart and will to transform one's self--and to make claims on what's rightfully one's own." The same can be said for Safe Suicide (Red Hen Press, 2008). Henry is a professor at Emerson College in Boston. He has also edited five anthologies, including Sorrows Company: Writers on Loss and Grief and (with James Alan McPherson) Fathering Daughters: Reflections by Men. He is working on a childhood memoir and novel.

Reviews
"In this interconnected collection of autobiographical essays, we're brought into the fascinating life of a Boston-area novelist and editor struggling to build a viable writing career, sustain an important literary journal, and become a loving husband, father, and friend. Since these struggles are all accompanied by drama and pain (but also by unexpected pleasures), DeWitt Henry's vivid collection reads like an absorbing coming-of-age memoir." --Chuck Leddy, "The Boston Globe" "In "Safe Suicide," an assemblage of revealing, interrelated essays, DeWitt Henry...offers up to us his world, honest and intimate. Henry's writing is confessional, yes, but these episodes don't feel designed to shock. More so, they're an acknowledgement of the strange, strained intimacies we share....Throughout, Henry is able to imbue weight and significance to the daily trials....And throughout, he demonstrates a reverence and a respect for his family, his fellow writers, his students, and the onward thumping push of life." --Nina McLaughlin, "The ""Phoenix"
In "Safe Suicide," an assemblage of revealing, interrelated essays, DeWitt Henry...offers up to us his world, honest and intimate. Henry's writing is confessional, yes, but these episodes don't feel designed to shock. More so, they're an acknowledgement of the strange, strained intimacies we share....Throughout, Henry is able to imbue weight and significance to the daily trials....And throughout, he demonstrates a reverence and a respect for his family, his fellow writers, his students, and the onward thumping push of life.
--Nina McLaughlin, "The ""Phoenix"
As with any flat-out wonderful book, a few words of praise cannot begin to do it justice. But here goes: SAFE SUCIDE is elegantly written, edgy, touching, inventive, surprising in its shifts of style and form, and completely spellbinding from start to finish. Partly memoir, partly a sequence of interlocked essays, this is a book that works its way under your skin and down into your vital organs. It is really, really good. --Tim O'Brien, author of THE THINGS THEY CARRIED
In this interconnected collection of autobiographical essays, we're brought into the fascinating life of a Boston-area novelist and editor struggling to build a viable writing career, sustain an important literary journal, and become a loving husband, father, and friend. Since these struggles are all accompanied by drama and pain (but also by unexpected pleasures), DeWitt Henry's vivid collection reads like an absorbing coming-of-age memoir.

--Chuck Leddy, THE BOSTON GLOBE


Henry's essays in different literary magazines are personal, telling, engrossing. The style is flowing, unpretentious, filled with the details and dialogue of good fiction that bring personal experience to life. In his quiet way, with genuine modesty, he tackles the deepest, most difficult themes and does not flinch from seeing them clearly no matter what they reveal. This is a writer who earns the reader's trust and respect.

--Dan Wakefield, author of GOING ALL THE WAY


In "Safe Suicide", an assemblage of revealing, interrelated essays, DeWitt Henry...offers up to us his world, honest and intimate. Henry's writing is confessional, yes, but these episodes don't feel designed to shock. More so, they're an acknowledgement of the strange, strained intimacies we share....Throughout, Henry is able to imbue weight and significance to the daily trials....And throughout, he demonstrates a reverence and a respect for his family, his fellow writers, his students, and the onward thumping push of life.
--Nina McLaughlin, "The ""Phoenix"
Henry is an insightful observer who is also a prose stylist of the first rank. --Richard Hoffman, author of HALF THE HOUSE
Safe Suicide is a powerful, deeply reflective account of the writer's struggle
to find meaning in our disappointments and the transcendent joy of our successes
in life. In an age where honesty in a memoir has become something of a rare
commodity, it takes real courage to show both our strengths and weaknesses, and
clearly this author is a brave soul. DeWitt Henry, a long distance runner, reminds us all that it is the race itself, not the simple crossing of the finish line, that defines the true
measure of our character. ---- James Brown author of THE LOS ANGELES DIARIES: A MEMOIR SAFE SUICIDE offers an enthralling portrait of the life of the artist as a husband, a father, an editor, a teacher, a runner, and a dog owner. DeWitt Henry writes with fearless beauty and honesty about his many, often irreconcilable passions. Here is a life lived over time and the result is thought-provoking, absorbing, and deeply moving. --Margot Livesey, author of BANISHING VERONA: A NOVEL


In "Safe Suicide", an assemblage of revealing, interrelated essays, DeWitt Henry...offers up to us his world, honest and intimate. Henry's writing is confessional, yes, but these episodes don't feel designed to shock. More so, they're an acknowledgement of the strange, strained intimacies we share....Throughout, Henry is able to imbue weight and significance to the daily trials....And throughout, he demonstrates a reverence and a respect for his family, his fellow writers, his students, and the onward thumping push of life.
--Nina McLaughlin, "The ""Phoenix"

In "Safe Suicide," an assemblage of revealing, interrelated essays, DeWitt Henry...offers up to us his world, honest and intimate. Henry's writing is confessional, yes, but these episodes don't feel designed to shock. More so, they're an acknowledgement of the strange, strained intimacies we share....Throughout, Henry is able to imbue weight and significance to the daily trials....And throughout, he demonstrates a reverence and a respect for his family, his fellow writers, his students, and the onward thumping push of life.
--Nina McLaughlin, "The ""Phoenix""

As with any flat-out wonderful book, a few words of praise cannot begin to do it justice. But here goes: SAFE SUCIDE is elegantly written, edgy, touching, inventive, surprising in its shifts of style and form, and completely spellbinding from start to finish. Partly memoir, partly a sequence of interlocked essays, this is a book that works its way under your skin and down into your vital organs. It is really, really good.

--Tim O Brien, author of THE THINGS THEY CARRIED


In this interconnected collection of autobiographical essays, we're brought into the fascinating life of a Boston-area novelist and editor struggling to build a viable writing career, sustain an important literary journal, and become a loving husband, father, and friend. Since these struggles are all accompanied by drama and pain (but also by unexpected pleasures), DeWitt Henry's vivid collection reads like an absorbing coming-of-age memoir.
--Chuck Leddy, THE BOSTON GLOBE

Henry s essays in different literary magazines are personal, telling, engrossing. The style is flowing, unpretentious, filled with the details and dialogue of good fiction that bring personal experience to life. In his quiet way, with genuine modesty, he tackles the deepest, most difficult themes and does not flinch from seeing them clearly no matter what they reveal. This is a writer who earns the reader s trust and respect.

--Dan Wakefield, author of GOING ALL THE WAY"

Henry is an insightful observer who is also a prose stylist of the first rank.

--Richard Hoffman, author of HALF THE HOUSE


Safe Suicide is a powerful, deeply reflective account of thewriter's struggle
to find meaning in our disappointments and the transcendent joy ofour successes
in life. In an age where honesty in a memoir has become somethingof a rare
commodity, it takes real courage to show both our strengths andweaknesses, and
clearly this author is a brave soul.DeWitt Henry, a long distance runner, reminds us all that it is therace itself, not the simple crossing of the finish line, that defines the true
measure of our character.

---- James Brown author of THE LOS ANGELES DIARIES: A MEMOIR

SAFE SUICIDE offers an enthralling portrait of the life of the artist as a husband, a father, an editor, a teacher, a runner, and a dog owner. DeWitt Henry writes with fearless beauty and honesty about his many, often irreconcilable passions. Here is a life lived over time and the result is thought-provoking, absorbing, and deeply moving.

--Margot Livesey, author of BANISHING VERONA: A NOVEL"

As with any flat-out wonderful book, a few words of praise cannot begin to do it justice. But here goes: SAFE SUCIDE is elegantly written, edgy, touching, inventive, surprising in its shifts of style and form, and completely spellbinding from start to finish. Partly memoir, partly a sequence of interlocked essays, this is a book that works its way under your skin and down into your vital organs. It is really, really good.

--Tim O Brien, author of THE THINGS THEY CARRIED


In this interconnected collection of autobiographical essays, we're brought into the fascinating life of a Boston-area novelist and editor struggling to build a viable writing career, sustain an important literary journal, and become a loving husband, father, and friend. Since these struggles are all accompanied by drama and pain (but also by unexpected pleasures), DeWitt Henry's vivid collection reads like an absorbing coming-of-age memoir.
--Chuck Leddy, THE BOSTON GLOBE

Henry s essays in different literary magazines are personal, telling, engrossing. The style is flowing, unpretentious, filled with the details and dialogue of good fiction that bring personal experience to life. In his quiet way, with genuine modesty, he tackles the deepest, most difficult themes and does not flinch from seeing them clearly no matter what they reveal. This is a writer who earns the reader s trust and respect.

--Dan Wakefield, author of GOING ALL THE WAY

"

Henry is an insightful observer who is also a prose stylist of the first rank.

--Richard Hoffman, author of HALF THE HOUSE


Safe Suicide is a powerful, deeply reflective account of thewriter's struggle
to find meaning in our disappointments and the transcendent joy ofour successes
in life. In an age where honesty in a memoir has become somethingof a rare
commodity, it takes real courage to show both our strengths andweaknesses, and
clearly this author is a brave soul.DeWitt Henry, a long distance runner, reminds us all that it is therace itself, not the simple crossing of the finish line, that defines the true
measure of our character.

---- James Brown author of THE LOS ANGELES DIARIES: A MEMOIR

SAFE SUICIDE offers an enthralling portrait of the life of the artist as a husband, a father, an editor, a teacher, a runner, and a dog owner. DeWitt Henry writes with fearless beauty and honesty about his many, often irreconcilable passions. Here is a life lived over time and the result is thought-provoking, absorbing, and deeply moving.

--Margot Livesey, author of BANISHING VERONA: A NOVEL

"

In Safe Suicide, an assemblage of revealing, interrelated essays, DeWitt Henry...offers up to us his world, honest and intimate. Henry's writing is confessional, yes, but these episodes don't feel designed to shock. More so, they're an acknowledgement of the strange, strained intimacies we share....Throughout, Henry is able to imbue weight and significance to the daily trials....And throughout, he demonstrates a reverence and a respect for his family, his fellow writers, his students, and the onward thumping push of life.
--Nina McLaughlin, The Phoenix"