
Rust Belt Femme
Raechel Anne Jolie
(Author)Description
One of NPR's Best Books of 2020, and winner of the 2020 Independent Publisher Awards' gold medal for LGBTQ+ nonfiction, Raechel Anne Jolie's blazing memoir is now available in paperback.
Raechel Anne Jolie's early life in a working-class Cleveland exurb was full of race cars, Budweiser-drinking men, and the women who loved them. When she was four, her life changed forever when her father came home from work, took the garbage out to the curb, and was hit by a drunk driver, suffering a debilitating brain injury. Rust Belt Femme is the story of her survival. Fearlessly honest, wry, and tender, Jolie digs into both the pain of past traumas and the joy of teenaged discovery to craft a love letter to the brassy, big-haired women who raised her and the 90s alternative culture that shaped her into who she is today: a queer femme with PTSD and a deep love of the Midwest.
Personal and political; lyrical and fierce, Rust Belt Femme speaks to anyone who was once a misfit kid trying to find their place in the world.
Product Details
Publisher | Belt Publishing |
Publish Date | September 14, 2021 |
Pages | 176 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781953368041 |
Dimensions | 6.9 X 4.9 X 0.5 inches | 0.5 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
Raechel Anne Jolie harnesses the interwoven beauty and trauma of coming of age femme in a tough part of our broken country. Compassionate and political, queer and punk and angry, Rust Belt Femme shows with grace and grit how community can save your life. -- Michelle Tea, author of How to Grow Up: A Memoir
As glowing and gritty as the Ohio lightning bugs Jolie writes about with such lyricism, this book is pure working-class queer femme magic. I feel the Midwestern ghosts palpably, all of them: historical, ancestral, emotional. Jolie has achieved at once a love letter to Ohio, a celebration of femme ancestors, and an ode to the complex relationships between mothers and daughters. Laced with equal doses of trauma, heartache, nostalgia, and hope, this book allows the reader to be profoundly seen -- and invited into healing. We all need more of this work. -- Shannon Weber, author of Feminism in Minutes
This book is emotional and powerful: it is deeply femme. With intimacy and care, every page brings with it a rich sense of place and time, every story shows the complex realities of working-class life. Enthralling from beginning to end.--Otter Lieffe, author of Margins and Murmurations
Raechel Anne Jolie's powerful debut memoir delves deep into the pain and beauty of coming of- age in working-class America at the turn of the twenty-first century. Multifaceted and vividly drawn, Rust Belt Femme seamlessly moves from tragedy to love, from basements pulsing with punk music to rooms and rooftops where sex and desire prompt leaps into great unknowns. Jolie is a rare and vital talent, a masterful storyteller with a riveting and necessary story to tell.-- Jason Allen, author of The East End and A Meditation on Fire
With Rust Belt Femme, Raechel Anne Jolie unveils a crystal ball, releasing a vivid love letter to her past, her mother, herself, and to Cleveland. Her clarity about how she became who she is takes us through an iconic time we may all have experienced, no matter where we are from. She takes us through her early relationships, showing how each of them helped her grow into her person, and you stay with her through the end, knowing she will somehow come out the other side. Her stunning writing alone makes me want to become a better writer. -- Iliana Regan, author of Burn the Place
Rust Belt Femme is a brilliant mixed tape of a memoir, a love song to the family and friends, the songs and sacred places, that helped Raechel Anne Jolie grow into the fierce thinker and passionate writer she is. This miraculous little book manages to plumb the depths of poverty, trauma, punk rock, maternal devotion, young love, and queer identity in language that is lyric and precise. I was blown away. You will be too. -- Steve Almond, author of Candyfreak and co-creator of Dear Sugar
Raechel Anne Jolie harnesses the interwoven beauty and trauma of coming of age femme in a tough part of our broken country. Compassionate and political, queer and punk and angry, Rust Belt Femme shows with grace and grit how community can save your life. -- Michelle Tea, author of How to Grow Up: A Memoir
As glowing and gritty as the Ohio lightning bugs Jolie writes about with such lyricism, this book is pure working-class queer femme magic. I feel the Midwestern ghosts palpably, all of them: historical, ancestral, emotional. Jolie has achieved at once a love letter to Ohio, a celebration of femme ancestors, and an ode to the complex relationships between mothers and daughters. Laced with equal doses of trauma, heartache, nostalgia, and hope, this book allows the reader to be profoundly seen -- and invited into healing. We all need more of this work. -- Shannon Weber, author of Feminism in Minutes
This book is emotional and powerful: it is deeply femme. With intimacy and care, every page brings with it a rich sense of place and time, every story shows the complex realities of working-class life. Enthralling from beginning to end.--Otter Lieffe, author of Margins and Murmurations
Raechel Anne Jolie's powerful debut memoir delves deep into the pain and beauty of coming of- age in working-class America at the turn of the twenty-first century. Multifaceted and vividly drawn, Rust Belt Femme seamlessly moves from tragedy to love, from basements pulsing with punk music to rooms and rooftops where sex and desire prompt leaps into great unknowns. Jolie is a rare and vital talent, a masterful storyteller with a riveting and necessary story to tell.-- Jason Allen, author of The East End and A Meditation on Fire
With Rust Belt Femme, Raechel Anne Jolie unveils a crystal ball, releasing a vivid love letter to her past, her mother, herself, and to Cleveland. Her clarity about how she became who she is takes us through an iconic time we may all have experienced, no matter where we are from. She takes us through her early relationships, showing how each of them helped her grow into her person, and you stay with her through the end, knowing she will somehow come out the other side. Her stunning writing alone makes me want to become a better writer. -- Iliana Regan, author of Burn the Place
Rust Belt Femme is a brilliant mixed tape of a memoir, a love song to the family and friends, the songs and sacred places, that helped Raechel Anne Jolie grow into the fierce thinker and passionate writer she is. This miraculous little book manages to plumb the depths of poverty, trauma, punk rock, maternal devotion, young love, and queer identity in language that is lyric and precise. I was blown away. You will be too. -- Steve Almond, author of Candyfreak and co-creator of Dear Sugar
Coming-of-age memoirs work best when the author is unafraid to dig deep into the context of their childhood, as well as the actual events. In her debut memoir, Rust Belt Femme, Raechel Anne Jolie gets it: On the surface, Femme is an exploration of trauma, queer identity and determination in the life of a Midwest kid trapped in a cycle of poverty and tragedy. But Jolie also stages this achingly personal story against the backdrop of the 1990s and early 2000s, with punk, emo and indie music playing as much of a role in her young life as the working-class environs that she rebelled against - and that she eventually came to grips with.-- Jason Heller, NPR Book Concierge's Best Books of 2020
A sharp coming-of-age portrait. -- Kirkus Reviews
Jolie's voice is at once funny and heart-wrenching, putting every reader who wanted to be part of a scene back into their adolescent shoes.--Alicia Kennedy, Tenderly
Quite possibly the first book that's ever made me well up with tears within the first few pages....[Jolie's] story is both remarkable and utterly ordinary; any dreamy kid who grew up broke and weird will see a spark of themselves in this book, which is also why it's so important.--Kim Kelly, The New Republic
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