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As children, Tam and her older brother were swimming when she
suffered her first epileptic seizure. He pulled her from the water
and was crowned a hero. Tam was labeled "disabled" and never swam
again. And so began 30 years of vigilance, never allowing her body
to betray her, never allowing her brother or her family or anyone
else to influence her path. Now, in middle age, a lifetime's worth
of control has taken its toll. Exhausted, she heads to Maine where,
while working on a genealogy project, she falls under the spell of
two dead women: an ancestor, Mary Catherine, who died at 33; the
other, the town ghost. Through their cloistered, tragic lives Tam
relives her own life over and over -- until a distant cousin forces
her to see herself in a new light. Tam's quest to transcend
self-imposed limitations is superbly crafted and richly
satisfying.
Chick-Lit: Postfeminist Fiction is the fourth volume in On the
Edge: New Women's Fiction, FC2's ongoing effort to discover new and
innovative voices in women's fiction. Determined to contradict the
myth that "women don't write experimental fiction," Chick-Lit
discovers women writers with a fresh and irreverent wit and
honesty, but no less powerful in their rendering of human
experience. Chick-Lit collects the original fiction of newly
discovered writers, but also the award winning work of notable
writers like Carole Maso, Jonis Agee, Stacy Levinne and Carolyn
Banks. Marked by innovations in form and point-of-view, the writers
in this collection are not satisfied with the terrain commonly
referred to as "women's writing." Insane asylum sex, board games
that control people's lives, a masochistic pedophile humiliated by
his victim, an obese woman paying nickels and quarters for
attention from teenage girls, a deranged hair stylist and her
disloyal dog, a men's impotence therapy group, a surreal landscape
constantly producing the body of a woman's mother: this is writing
that shouts, yes, there is such a thing as postfeminist fiction.
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Charlatan (Paperback)
Cris Mazza
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R543
R459
Discovery Miles 4 590
Save R84 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Told in a broken shorthand voice, Mazza's language is acute,
evoking a place where the patients, the caregivers, and the system
are all disabled. Teri and Cleo are minimum-wage nurse-aides at a
state ward for severely retarded and physically handicapped
children. They are expected to feed, bathe, clothe, and carry out
the required therapies for their patients in a 4-hour shift.
They're working within a system where money for therapy is only
continued if therapy shows improvement--and yet the state-paid
therapists who oversee the ward know the patients will never show
any improvement. To keep the money coming in, it is up to the
minimum-wage caregivers to "see" and chart important improvements,
thus keeping the therapy program alive.
Blinded in their own way by their pet-like adoption of favorite
patients, Teri and Cleo struggle to remain both optimistic and
realistic. As their personal failures mount--and even transpose or
emulate the travesties within the state ward--Teri and Cleo, with
their own unseen "disabilities" in dealing with their lives and
pasts, react harshly to the breakdown in the emotional balancing
act.
While in many ways reaffirming the mythic dimension of being on the
road already romanticized in American pop and folk culture,
"Revelation Countdown" also subtly undermines that view. These
stories project onto the open road not the nirvana of personal
freedom but rather a type of freedom more closely resembling loss
of control. Being in constant motion and passing through new
environments destabilizes life, casts it out of phase, heightens
perception, skews reactions. Every little problem is magnified to
overwhelming dimensions; events segue from slow motion to fast
forward; background noises intrude, causing perpetual weehour
insomnia. Imagination flourishes, often as an enemy: people
suddenly discover that they never really understood their
travelling companions. The formerly stable line of their lives
veers off course. In such an atmosphere, the title "Revelation
Countdown", borrowed from a roadside sign in Tennessee, proves
prophetic: It may not arrive at 7:30, but revelation will
inevitably find the traveller.
The follow-up volume to Mazza and DeShell's hugely popular
Chick-Lit: Postfeminist Fiction Chick-Lit 2: No Chick Vics features
new work by Rikki Ducornet, Eurydice, Elizabeth Graver, Ursule
Molinaro, and fourteen other witty and deadly serious writers.
Chick-Lit 2 discovers new and alternative voices in women's fiction
whose stories do not involve trauma that comes from the outside. As
Mazza writes in her introduction, "Sexual assaults and harassments
and injurious poor body images do exist and have waged a war on
women (the American Medical Association says so). But for this
book, I was interested in seeing what action(s) women characters
can incite on their own, whether bad or good, hopeful or dead-end,
progressive or destructive."
From D. H. Lawrence to Philip Roth, acclaimed male writers have
depicted sex from the perspective of female characters. Now, women
writers from Aimee Bender to Jennifer Egan engage in provocative
fictional cross-dressing, exploring sexuality from the male point
of view. With a foreword by Steve Almond, this provocative
collection includes work from twenty-six women in all, including
Bender, Egan, Susan Minot, Elizabeth Benedict, Alicia Erian, and
Diane Williams. Edited by Gina Frangello, Stacy Bierlein, Cris
Mazza and Kat Meads--four women with a great deal of experience as
editors ("Other Voices Magazine," OV Books, anthologies) and
authors.
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