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Shout Her Lovely Name - by Natalie Serber (Paperback)

Shout Her Lovely Name - by  Natalie Serber (Paperback)
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Last Price: 9.89 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p>A collection of stories about the complicated and powerful ties between mothers and daughters.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>A <i>New York Times</i> Notable Book <p/>"Nuanced and smart . . . Serber knows that neglect or disconnect doesn't always turn into trauma or damage. Life isn't algebra. Which events lead to pain, and which to growth and awareness, remains unpredictable. The one reliable truth is that mistakes illuminate the most, albeit with fractured light." <br>--<i>The New York Times Book Review </i> <p/>Mothers and daughters ride a familial tide of joy, pride, regret, guilt, and love in these acclaimed stories of flawed, resilient women. Wheat bread and plain yogurt become weapons in a battle between a teenage daughter and her mother. An aimless college student, married to her much older professor, sneaks cigarettes while caring for their newborn son. On the eve of her husband's fiftieth birthday, a pilfered fifth of rum, rogue teenagers, and an unexpected tattoo has a woman questioning her place in her children's lives. And we follow through two decades the family created when capricious, magnetic Ruby, an ambitious college student, becomes a single mother to cautious daughter Nora in 1970s California. <i>Shout Her Lovely Name</i> is a "funny, bittersweet" (<i>Vanity Fair</i>) book that announces the arrival of a stunning new writer. <p/>"Powerful and disquieting . . . Serber writes with exquisite patience and sensitivity, and is an expert in the many ways that love throws people together and splits them apart, often at the same time." <br>--<i>The Wall Street Journal</i> <p/>"Always, Serber's writing sparkles: practical, strong, brazenly modern, marbled with superb descriptions . . . Take my word: <i>Shout Her Lovely Name</i> will reach inside readers and squeeze. On second thought, don't take my word. Read these lovely stories." <br>--<i>San Francisco Chronicle<br></i><br>www.natalieserber.com<p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br>A "New York Times" Notable Book <BR> Nuanced and smart . . . Serber knows that neglect or disconnect doesn t always turn into trauma or damage. Life isn t algebra. Which events lead to pain, and which to growth and awareness, remains unpredictable. The one reliable truth is that mistakes illuminate the most, albeit with fractured light. "The New York Times Book Review " <BR>Mothers and daughters ride a familial tide of joy, pride, regret, guilt, and love in these acclaimed stories of flawed, resilient women. Wheat bread and plain yogurt become weapons in a battle between a teenage daughter and her mother. An aimless college student, married to her much older professor, sneaks cigarettes while caring for their newborn son. On the eve of her husband s fiftieth birthday, a pilfered fifth of rum, rogue teenagers, and an unexpected tattoo has a woman questioning her place in her children s lives. And we follow through two decades the family created when capricious, magnetic Ruby, an ambitious college student, becomes a single mother to cautious daughter Nora in 1970s California. "Shout Her Lovely Name" is a funny, bittersweet ("Vanity Fair") book that announces the arrival of a stunning new writer. <BR> Powerful and disquieting . . . Serber writes with exquisite patience and sensitivity, and is an expert in the many ways that love throws people together and splits them apart, often at the same time. "The Wall Street Journal" <BR> Always, Serber's writing sparkles: practical, strong, brazenly modern, marbled with superb descriptions . . . Take my word: "Shout Her Lovely Name" will reach inside readers and squeeze. On second thought, don't take my word. Read these lovely stories. "San Francisco Chronicle" <BR>"<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p><b>Call it fiction, but this collection is achingly true to life when it comes to the many ways mothers and daughters grow together and apart, over and over again.<br></b>--<i>O, the Oprah Magazine <p/></i><b>The characters are irresistible . . . Serber writes with exquisite patience and sensitivity, and is an expert in the many ways that love throws people together and splits them apart, often at the same time. <br></b>--<i>Wall Street Journal <p/></i><b>Mothers and daughters go at it in the way only mothers and daughters can, with full hearts and claws out, in Natalie Serber's funny, bittersweet collection. . . . It's the perfect firecracker of a book to 'accidentally' stick in the beach bag of the freewheeling mother who refuses to give up her independence and grow up, or to leave on the chaise lounge of the type-A daughter who's forced to grow up and never gets to be a girl. <br></b>--<i>Vanity Fair </i></p><p><b>From its first page, Serber's debut collection plunges us into the humid heat and lightning of a perfect storm: that of American mothers and daughers struggling for power, love, meaning, and identity. . . .Serber's writing sparkles: practical, strong, brazenly modern, marbled with superb descriptions. <br></b>--<i>San Francisco Chronicle</i></p><p><b>Serber is keen on the nuances of maternal bonds, and highlights them with an undeniable accuracy. --</b> <i>More Magazine, 10 Short Books We Love</i></p><p><b>Mothers and daughters burst from these pages in stories about food, boyfriends, birthdays, husbands and more. --</b><i>Houston Chronicle</i></p><p><b>There is an element of the miraculous in a collection of stories whose characters reveal the fundamental predicament of all parents and children. . . .[Serber is] clearly writing not from some high plane of solitude but from within the mess of life. <br></b>--<i>Huffington Post</i></p><p><b>Serber's stellar first collection packs an emotional wallop right from the start...sharp, somber, and sparkling commentary... As provocative as it is poignant, Serber's searingly honest depiction of the complex, contentious, and confusing bonds at the heart of all families heralds an exceptional new talent</b>.<br>--<i>Booklist </i>(starred)</p><p><b>From the very first page, this extraordinary collection of short stories grabbed me by the throat and wouldn't let go. It is filled with poignant, thought-provoking observations on the delicate yet unbreakable bond between mothers and daughters. Serber has given readers a remarkable, heart-felt book to be savored, shared and passed on from one generation to another.<br></b>--Anderson McKean, <i> Page & Palette, Fairhope, AL</i></p><p><b>As its title implies, Natalie Serber's collection <i>Shout Her Lovely Name</i> is a triumphant battle cry of hard-won victory over the stalemate and injuries between mothers and daughters. She leaves the reader amazed at the tenacity, tenderness, and truth of her characters. <br></b>--Siobhan Fallon, author of <i>You Know When the Men are Gone</p></i><b><i>Shout Her Lovely Name</i> joins the ranks of the finest books ever to address relations between daughters and their mothers--equal parts love and sandpaper.</b> <b>I ached for these characters and cried at their hard-earned moments of joy. A book to make you marvel that someone really does understand, to make you grateful that she wrote it all down so fiercely, so tenderly. <br></b>--Robin Black, author of <i>If I Loved You I Would Tell You This</i></p><b> In the complexities of family triumphs and catastrophes, Natalie Serber is always achingly specific. Between mothers and daughters, women and their lovers, she misses nothing, and in all her scenes, the reader feels the true breath of life. <br></b>--Charles Baxter</p><b>In the tradition of Lorrie Moore and Tobias Wolff, Natalie Serber's stories uncover the secret hearts of seemingly ordinary people.</b> <b>Funny, heart-felt, and keenly perceptive</b>, <b>this is a book worth shouting about</b>. <br>--Dan Chaon, author of <i>Await Your Reply</i> and <i>Stay Awake</i></p><p><b>Coming of age is a painful and beautiful experience in Natalie Serber's hands</b>. <b>These are</b> <b>funny and poignant pieces, building a book that feels novelistic in sweep, yet true to the precision and direct aim of the short story. A real pleasure.<br></b>--Antonya Nelson<br>

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