Apple, tree Writers on their parents

Book - 2019

"Apple, Tree features a slate of compelling, original essays that eloquently consider a trait they've each inherited from a parent, exploring how it affects the lives they lead today, how it shifts their relationship, and how it changes their sense of self." --

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Biographies
Published
Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press [2019]
Language
English
Other Authors
Lise Funderburg (author)
Physical Description
xiv, 213 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781496212092
  • Introduction / Lise Funderburg
  • Predictions / Laura van den Berg
  • Curtains / Sallie Tisdale
  • Lies my parents (never but maybe should've) told me / Shukree Hassan Tilghman
  • Better angels / Clifford Thompson
  • The only light we've got / Angelique Stevens
  • Household idols / Avi Steinberg
  • Just say the word / Lizzie Skurnick
  • All knotted up / Dana Prescott
  • Sisters / Ann Patchett
  • One man's poison / Kyoko Mori
  • Unlived lives / Laura Miller
  • A measure of perversity / Marc Mewshaw
  • Off, off, off, off, off / Daniel Mendelsohn
  • What we keep / Donna Masini
  • My story about my mother / Mat Johnson
  • Never have just one boss / Susan Ito
  • Spending the sparkle / Jane Hamilton
  • Around the table / Lauren Grodstein
  • This truth about chaos / John Freeman
  • No indifferent place / Carolyn Ferrell
  • And Niriko makes four / Lolis Eric Elie
  • Fragments from the long game / Kate Carroll de Gutes
  • Self-made men / Leland Cheuk
  • The nut doesn't fall far from the fucking nut tree / S. Bear Bergman
  • The feeding gene / Karen Grigsby Bates.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The old adage, "The apple doesn't fall far from the tree," encouraged Funderburg, a University of Pennsylvania lecturer, to explore its truth in this sparkling anthology of essays on the contributors' parents. Its selections all echo John Freeman's declaration, "Love is in clarity, not sentiment." Freeman, like Kyoko Mori and Avi Steinberg, find benefit in troublesome family legacies. Marc Mewshaw and Jane Hamilton look back on a parent's writing career, and Bear Bergman credits his father's knack for oral, rather than written, storytelling with shaping his own narrative abilities. Lauren Grodstein and Karen Grigsby Bates pay tribute to their mothers' cooking, and Susan Ito and Dana Prescott do the same to the adventurous, extroverted lives of their fathers (both traveling salesmen.) Lolis Eric Elie reflects on the uncommon first name he shares with his father and son, and Ann Patchett muses on the close likeness she bears to her mother. These essays particularly excel with serving up memorable last lines, as in Patchett's piece, in which the nurse overseeing her mother's hospital care comments on how similar they look--"Like sisters?" Patchett asks, to which the nurse replies, "No, like the same person." These essays, in addition to being resonant in their own right, will also move readers to recollect stories of their own parents. Agent: Geri Thoma, Writers House. (Sept.)

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