Keep moving Notes on loss, creativity, and change

Maggie Smith, 1977-

Book - 2020

"By Pushcart award-winning poet Maggie Smith, a collection of quotes and essays on facing life's challenges with creativity, courage, and resilience"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

155.24/Smith
2 / 3 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 155.24/Smith Due Jan 5, 2025
2nd Floor 155.24/Smith Checked In
2nd Floor 155.24/Smith Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Quotations
Sayings
Essays
Self-help publications
Published
New York : One Signal Publishers / Atria 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Maggie Smith, 1977- (author)
Edition
First One Signal Publishers/Artia Books hardcover edition
Physical Description
214 pages ; 19 cm
ISBN
9781982132071
  • Revision. The long book ; Beauty emergency
  • Resilience. After the fire ; The golden repair
  • Transformation. The blue rushes in ; Nesters.
Review by Booklist Review

Award-winning poet Smith gained an enormous online following after her poem, "Good Bones," went viral; she then began tweeting daily goals after she and her husband ended their 19-year marriage. She addresses such topics as accepting change, letting light into your life, and surviving loneliness. Smith acknowledges the pain of loss but also celebrates new beginnings, recognizes fears but strives to be brave. Each tweet ends with the words: "Keep moving." This much-anticipated book organizes the tweets into three stages: revision, resilience, and transformation. Each message appears alone on the page, resembling a short poem. Occasional bursts of prose between the tweets provide details about Smith's life and family during these difficult times. Smith is thoughtful and eloquent, expressing her understanding of the grief of separation, and sharing encouragement without being saccharine. She confesses to being a fearful child who loved solitude, and now, once again on her own while her children are away with their father, Smith finds hope in solitary times. Anyone facing loss, separation, and related challenges will find comfort in Smith's gentle words.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Poet Smith (Good Bones) reflects on loss, beauty, and transformation in a thoughtful but not entirely satisfying collection. The slight volume compiles inspirational tweets--all concluding with the admonition to "keep moving"--that Smith began writing in the wake of a divorce. The messages are loosely organized into three parts ("Revision," "Resilience," and "Transformation") and interspersed with short personal essays. When read individually, the bite-size sentiments succeed as wise and compassionate pieces of encouragement. But bound together in book format, they blur together and fail to leave much of an impression. The bland, minimalist design doesn't do the work any favors, either. Meanwhile, the essays, which carry on the same themes, but add details of Smith's own experiences, are uneven. While some rely on tired metaphors of transformation (fire, chrysalises), others have striking and memorable imagery that showcases Smith's eye as a poet: "like when you pull your hand out of a bucket of water, and the water takes back the space." Smith's reflections on her struggles with miscarriage and postpartum depression are especially affecting. Readers will wish her obvious talents had been used in a way that does them justice. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Words of encouragement from an award-winning poet. A couple years ago, following the end of her marriage, Smith, the author of Good Bones (2017) and other poetry collections, took to Twitter to share a daily affirmation, imploring herself and her readers to #keepmoving. Combined with original short essays, those tweets demonstrate that social media can be a source of wisdom, as the author allows her own story of grief and transformation to inspire. Drawing on her experience as a writer, Smith views the self through the metaphor of a composition, one the "author" must constantly tend to: "Accept that you are a work in progress, both a revision and a draft: you are better and more complete than earlier versions of yourself, but you also have work to do. Be open to change. Allow yourself to be revised." She continues later, "revise the story you tell yourself about rejection. All that tells you is what you were worth to someone else--not what you are worth." Whether or not we are the authors of ourselves in any real sense, the metaphor is a powerful one that encourages the agency it takes to positively reframe pain and disappointment as opportunities for growth. If this sounds like self-help, it is. Even the book's interior design has more in common with a fancy greeting card than with a traditional book, poetry or prose. But self-help needn't be a slur derived from the worst instances of the genre. Smith offers a reminder of what self-help can be at its best: intelligent, honest, uncompromising, and, most importantly, helpful. The author's frequent references to the writing life may mean the book resonates most deeply with her fellow artists, but for anyone who has known struggle--i.e., everyone--it will resonate plenty. Simple yet profound insights and advice to return to in times of confusion or loss. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.