Daughter in Retrograde: A Memoir
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Description
When she isn't eavesdropping on family gossip or gazing at taxidermy squirrels in smoky dives, Courtney Kersten charts the uncertainty of her midwestern homeland by looking to the stars and planets. As a teen she had plunged deep into the worlds of signs, symbols, and prophecy. But as her mother--her traveling companion into these spheres--lies dying, Kersten must learn to navigate without the person who always lit the way. Their last journey together, to swim in a Wisconsin lake, is a bittersweet, darkly comic, poignant climax to this transformative memoir.
Product Details
Price
$24.95
Publisher
University of Wisconsin Press
Publish Date
November 09, 2007
Pages
208
Dimensions
5.7 X 8.6 X 0.9 inches | 0.8 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780299317003
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Courtney Kersten is an essayist and scholar. A native of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, she teaches creative writing at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her essays can be found in River Teeth, Hotel Amerika, DIAGRAM, The Sonora Review, Black Warrior Review, and The Master's Review.
Reviews
"A fierce and funny meditation on family and loss that surprises the reader again and again, full of beautiful sassiness and skepticism even as it is so open to the numinous possibilities of what is unseen."
--Tim Miller, author of Body Blows
"Heartbreaking in its honesty, lovely in its artistry, succoring in its strength. A stunning memoir." --Mary Clearman Blew, author of This Is Not the Ivy
"A fast-paced, funny, heartbreaking memoir about a midwestern mother-daughter Thelma and Louise, hard partying, wise cracking, and brave. A tragic-comic meditation on love, loss, and what we see in the stars." --Micah Perks, author of What Becomes Us
--Tim Miller, author of Body Blows
"Heartbreaking in its honesty, lovely in its artistry, succoring in its strength. A stunning memoir." --Mary Clearman Blew, author of This Is Not the Ivy
"A fast-paced, funny, heartbreaking memoir about a midwestern mother-daughter Thelma and Louise, hard partying, wise cracking, and brave. A tragic-comic meditation on love, loss, and what we see in the stars." --Micah Perks, author of What Becomes Us