|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
These twenty-seven "hair pieces" offer up reflections and
revelations about family, race, religion, ritual, culture,
motherhood, politics, celebrity, what goes on in African American
kitchens and at Hindu Bengali weddings, alongside stories about the
influence of Jackie Kennedy, Lena Horne, Farrah Fawcett, and the
Grateful Dead. Layered into these essays you'll find surprises,
insights, hilarity, and the resonance of common experience. Marita
Golden writes about her grief over what so many African American
women still endure to obtain "good hair." Patricia Volk itemizes
her seventeen hair care products, each with a price tag. Myla
Goldberg tells of how ill equipped she was to tend the hair of her
adopted biracial daughter. And Suleika Jaouad describes the ravages
of chemotherapy and the empowerment of shaving designs onto her
head.
By turns somber and funny but above all provocative, Elizabeth
Benedict’s Rewriting Illness: A View of My Own is a
most unconventional memoir. With wisdom, self-effacing wit, and the
story-telling skills of a seasoned novelist, she brings to life her
cancer diagnosis and committed hypochondria. As she discovers
multiplying lumps in her armpit, she describes her initial terror,
interspersed with moments of self-mocking levity as she indulges in
“natural remedies,” among them chanting Tibetan mantras,
drinking shots of wheat grass, and finding medicinal properties in
chocolate babka. She tracks the progression of her illness
from muddled diagnosis to debilitating treatment as she gathers
sustenance from her family and an assortment of urbane, ironic
friends, including her fearless “cancer guru.” In brief,
explosive chapters with startling titles – “Was it the Krazy
Glue?” and “Not Everything Scares the Shit out of Me” –
Benedict investigates existential questions: Is there a cancer
personality? Can trauma be passed on generationally? Can cancer be
stripped of its warlike metaphors? How do doctors’ own fears
influence their comments to patients? Is there a gendered response
to illness? Why isn’t illness one of literature’s great
subjects? And delving into her own history, she wonders if having
had children would have changed her life as a writer and
hypochondriac. Post diagnosis, Benedict asks, “Which fear is
worse: the fear of knowing or the reality of knowing? (164)”
Throughout, Benedict’s humor, wisdom, and warmth jacket her
fears, which are personal, political, and ultimately global, when
the world is pitched into a pandemic. Amid weighty concerns and her
all-consuming obsession with illness, her story is filled with
suspense, secrets, and even the unexpected solace of
silence.
In this razor-sharp novel of marriage and divorce gone awry,
Elizabeth Benedict navigates the turbulent waters of love, power,
and vengeance with biting wit and penetrating insight.
When the Manhattan psychotherapist Eric Lavender meets the sexy,
stylish lawyer Colleen O'Brien Golden, his bachelor life suddenly
loses its long-standing appeal. Soon he moves to Scarsdale to join
Colleen and finds a life of domestic bliss as a husband and father
with a new baby and an adorable stepdaughter. But Eric's suburban
oasis is threatened when a legal conflict of interest with Colleen
turns up disturbing evidence of a hidden past.
|
Almost (Paperback)
Elizabeth Benedict
bundle available
|
R458
R415
Discovery Miles 4 150
Save R43 (9%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
ALMOST, Elizabeth Benedict's fourth novel, is "her most spirited to date" (New York Times Book Review). Forty-something narrator Sophy Chase has just begun a lighthearted, romantically adventurous life in New York City when she learns that her almost ex-husband has been found dead on the New England resort island where she left him just months before. Lured back to the island by feelings she thought she had left behind, Sophy must navigate treacherous emotional terrain involving her grown stepdaughters, a former lover who is now a celebrity lawyer, the mystery of her husband's death -- and her own darkest impulses.
For the first time in trade paperback, the definitive book on writing sex in fiction that is a "wonderful and handy compendium of how to write-and have fun with-sex" (Carolyn See)
Five years after it was first published, The Joy of Writing Sex remains the classic guide to writing convincing sex scenes. Elizabeth Benedict covers all the issues, from the first time, to married sex and adultery, to sex in the age of AIDS.
Her instruction, supported with examples from the works of today's most respected writers-among them, Dorothy Allison, Russell Banks, Alan Hollinghurst, Joyce Carol Oates, Carol Shields, and John Updike-focuses on crafting believable sex scenes that hinge on freshness of character, dialogue, mood, and plot.
In this revised edition, Benedict addresses the latest sexual revolution, intimacy on the Internet; adds new interviews with Edmund White, Darren Strauss, Stephen McCauley, and other writers; and updates her selections to include examples from the best fiction of the past few years.
|
|