
Description
When Jessica Handler was eight years old, her younger sister Susie was diagnosed with leukemia. To any family, the diagnosis would have been upending, but to the Handlers, whose youngest daughter, Sarah, had been born with a rare, fatal blood disorder, it was an unimaginable verdict. Struck by the unlikelihood of siblings sick with diametrically opposed illnesses, the medical community labeled the Handlers' situation a bizarre coincidence. To their mother, the girls' unlikely diagnoses constituted a reverse miracle--the sort no one wishes for. By the time she was nine years old, Jessica had begun to introduce herself as the "well sibling."
Deeply moving and exquisitely written, Invisible Sisters is an extraordinary story of coming of age as the odd one out--as the daughter of progressive Jewish parents who moved to the South to participate in the civil rights movement of the 1960s, as the healthy sister among sick, and eventually, as the only sister left standing. In a book that is as hard to forget as it is to put down, Handler captures the devastating effects of illness and death on a family and the triumphant account of one woman's enduring journey to step out of the shadow of loss to find herself anew.
Product Details
Publisher | University of Georgia Press |
Publish Date | September 15, 2015 |
Pages | 272 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780820348926 |
Dimensions | 8.6 X 5.5 X 0.7 inches | 0.8 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
""Invisible Sisters" is both heartbreaking and hopeful. Even as Jessica Handler tells us of her family's losses, she reminds us to celebrate life. Handler shows us how to move forward without being afraid to look back. This book is a gift."--Ann Hood, author of "Comfort"
"Invisible Sisters is an unsentimental but deeply moving look at the ways in which loss--loss past and the loss that is still to come--can shape lives. Jessica Handler's book is a quiet, near-hypnotic tour de force."--Michael Wex, author of "Born to Kvetch: Yiddish Language and Culture in All Its Moods"
"Some memoirs are affecting because they are universal, some because they are unique. Jessica Handler's Invisible Sisters derives its gut-punch power from being both. . . . Handler tells this story with the lyrical elegance and cool remove of Joan Didion's "The Year of Magical Thinking"--the highest praise possible for any memoir of loss. . . . There is an undeniable burden in being 'the only one left, ' but there is true grace in the act--and art--of first remembering, then surviving."--Terese Weaver, "Atlanta Magazine"
"This clear-eyed, candid work portrays the immense emotional toll that two daughters' illnesses take on a family."--"Publishers Weekly"
"With a sure grasp of revelatory detail, the author recalls homely verities from a vanished life. Her memory piece is an elegy for her dead sisters, who are not quite lost as long as they live in her thoughts. A heartfelt, painful family saga, skillfully told by a survivor."--"Kirkus Reviews"
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