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Ghosts Are Just Strangers Who Know How to Knock - by Hillary Leftwich (Paperback)

Ghosts Are Just Strangers Who Know How to Knock - by  Hillary Leftwich (Paperback)
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Last Price: 15.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Ghosts Are Just Strangers Who Know How to Knock is a multi-genre collection that examines grief, violence, heartbreak, and the universal challenge of living in a body that is always vulnerable.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><em>Ghosts Are Just Strangers Who Know How to Knock</em> is a multi-genre collection that examines grief, violence, heartbreak, and the universal challenge of living in a body that is always vulnerable. In this greyscale kaleidoscope of the familiar and the uncanny, muted voices shout, people commit to devastating choices, and mundane moments are filled with silent hauntings. A sleep paralysis and a séance of voices long dead, this collection's characters illuminate both our own darkness and our strength, revealing how love can emerge from the most impossible of conditions.</p> <p>These vignettes travel through a life--young, urban, domestic, mother-making, myth-making-- and at turns contain cursed images, hilarity, and tender moments of sincere vulnerability. Leftwich's characters curve out of what is expected: they surprise you, they confess, they hide, they snark, they love and long. Each character feels unique and new, but together this collection becomes a protean whole of the many faces of hurt, complete and glittering. Leftwich shows us them, flaws and all, unable to escape their rawest moments.<br /> -<strong>Elle Nash</strong>, author of Animals Eat Each Other</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>These vignettes travel through a life--young, urban, domestic, mother-making, myth-making-- and at turns contain cursed images, hilarity, and tender moments of sincere vulnerability. Leftwich's characters curve out of what is expected: they surprise you, they confess, they hide, they snark, they love and long. Each character feels unique and new, but together this collection becomes a protean whole of the many faces of hurt, complete and glittering. Leftwich shows us them, flaws and all, unable to escape their rawest moments.<br /> -<strong>Elle Nash</strong>, author of Animals Eat Each Other</p><p>Hillary Leftwich's <em>Ghosts are Just Strangers Who Know How to Knock</em> is comprised of seventy-two brief narratives that jab & gesture at intimacy, not the comforting fantasy of it, but the bewildering state at the core of intimacy, where all is lawless, collapsing boundaries between right & wrong, self & other, truth & fantasy. The pieces feel like pages ripped from the diaries of lost souls, sometimes deadpan & direct, sometimes fluttering through fever dreams & teetering realities in which intimates reveals themselves to be a hole, or to be pieced together of broken seashells, or cleaning up strangers' used sex toys at a Motel 6. Through the book's often-bleak experiences, the repeated form of the vignette shows a way of, if not transcending, at least progressing out of life's traumas & confusions. No matter how bad it can get, Leftwich tells me, we can get through it.<br /> <strong>-Mathias Svalina, </strong> author of <em>The Wine-Dark Sea</em></p><p>For years I've heard aloud, and read in multiple journals, pieces from <em>Ghosts Are Strangers Who Knock. </em>After<em> </em>each reading or listening I wrote down these haunting and caring images on receipts, bookmarks, coffee sleeves. What made me write these things was their honesty--the things that are hard to say but need to be said. Hillary Leftwich has written something special where vulnerability is a form of resistance. Where vulnerability drags shame and guilt from their shadows and sets them on tables as centerpieces so we can view them from all angles.<br /> <strong>-Steven Dunn, </strong> author of <em>Potted Meat</em></p><p>This wonderful book is made of lightning bolts and thunderclaps. Each page is a different kind of human storm. Some carry you up into the sky, others send the moon careening down to you. Hillary Leftwich is an extraordinary talent.<br /> <strong>-Bud Smith</strong>, author of <em>Calm Face and Work</em></p><p>In this hybrid collection of works, Hillary Leftwich speaks to us in her own deeply authentic, inimitable voice. Innovative in approach and breathtaking in execution, <em>Ghosts Are Just Strangers Who Know How to Knock</em> is a haunted and haunting work of art. By turns gut-wrenching, dark, funny, and ultimately transcendent, this is a must-read book by a writer of considerable depth and originality.<br /> <strong>-Kathy Fish</strong>, author of <em>Wild Life: Collected Works from 2003-2018</em></p><p>Leftwich's stories pulse with luminous imagery and hard-won wisdom. With an impressive range, from the surreal (a lover building an empty house with fallen stars, dead-animal cosplay on Dr. Phil) to stark reality (girls on the precarious cusp of womanhood and mothers navigating duty and love), her work mesmerizes with its richness and complexity. These pages vibrate with dreams and enigmas, pain and wonder, danger and vulnerability, intergenerational violence and bone-deep love. This collection is aptly named--it will haunt you long after you turn the last page.<br /> <strong>-Tara Campbell</strong>, author of <em>TreeVolution </em></p><br>

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