<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Using inventive forms, <i>Persephone's Children</i> chronicles Rowan McCandless's odyssey as a Black, biracial woman after escaping the stranglehold of domestic abuse.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>After years of secrecy and silence, Rowan McCandless leaves an abusive relationship and rediscovers her voice and identity through writing.</b><br/><br/>She was never to lie to him. She was never to leave him; and she was never supposed to tell.<br/><br/><i>Persephone's Children</i> chronicles Rowan McCandless's odyssey as a Black, biracial woman escaping the stranglehold of a long-term abusive relationship. Through a series of thematically linked and structurally inventive essays, McCandless explores the fraught and fragmented relationship between memory and trauma. Multiple mythologies emerge to bind legacy and loss, motherhood and daughterhood, racism and intergenerational trauma, mental illness and resiliency.<br/><br/>It is only in the aftermath that she can begin to see the patterns in her history, hear the echoes of oppression passed down from unknown, unnamed ancestors, and discover her worth and right to exist in the world.<br/><br/>A RARE MACHINES BOOK<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>In <i>Persephone's Children</i>, Rowan McCandless innovates, challenges, and dares. Here is an interrogation on race, kinship, history, and future, told with a poetic whimsy that refuses boundaries of genre and theme. McCandless's writing is incisive and inventive, a true literary gift. A brilliant, meditative, necessary book.-- "Jenny Heijun Wills, author of Older Sister. Not Necessarily Related.: A Memoir"<br><br>In <i>Persephone's Children</i>, Rowan McCandless stands up and says, Enough! And in the process of disentangling herself from relationships of abuse, she reinvents herself to reclaim herself. She sets boundaries that center her needs as a form of self-love. With these raw, real, and personal stories, she constitutes a statue of her personhood -- humanizing herself -- blending her scars with her strengths and her vision for herself, rejecting the lies that had previously depicted her as lesser than. In <i>Persephone's Children</i>, McCandless rises and becomes a revolutionary scaffold that centers her Self. Her own healing and self-validation: a form of resistance. She takes control of her story and tells it in her own way. She reminds us that it is okay to love yourself and to lose yourself in your own embrace. And in that cradle, she deconstructs her form, rebuilding it into something that makes more sense to her. In her defiance, she forces us to not only behold her story but storytelling as a whole, creating the conditions for us to also dissect our literary instincts and other borders of abuse that have colonized our bodies and minds. <b>Though <i>Persephone's Children</i> may be her life in fragments, McCandless inspires readers to also experiment with their own lives in order to create beyond the limits of the forces that have for far too long told us to sit down, shut up, and follow the rules.</b>-- "Julián Esteban Torres López, creator of The Nasiona and author of Ninety-Two Surgically Enhanced Mannequins: A Micro-Poetry Collection"<br><br><p>A powerful, moving book.</p>-- "Midwest Book Review"<br><br><i>Persephone's Children</i> is a book like no other -- a beautifully strange collection that defies literary conventions and dazzles with ingenuity and vitality. With luminous, lyrical prose, Rowan McCandless boldly tells the story of her rise from an abusive relationship, weaves the historical with the deeply personal, and explores themes of identity, religion, colonialism, mental illness, and racism. Rowan McCandless is a fierce writer, and her writing will move and haunt you.-- "Ayelet Tsabari, award-winning author of The Art of Leaving"<br><br>In these dazzlingly inventive essays, Rowan McCandless doesn't just play with traditional forms, she blows right past them to fashion an aching account of trauma and survival. I needed to read this utterly original, gorgeous book -- and so do you.-- "Kathy Friedman, co-founder and artistic director of InkWell Workshops, and author of All the Shining People"<br><br>Women understand the story of Persephone, abducted by her uncle Hades while her mother Demeter's grief creates a winter where nothing grows -- each of us is Persephone. Rowan McCandless fled an abusive marriage but it meant leaving a beloved garden behind and she still negotiates with the systemic racism that confines her every day. But she brought these essays up out of the underworld, each one a gleaming pomegranate seed. Deftly written and structurally innovative, <i>Persephone's Children</i> is a heartbreaking debut.-- "Ariel Gordon, author of Treed: Walking in Canada's Urban Forests"<br><br>Rowan McCandless is a masterful storyteller. These compelling offerings create a spell-binding book of revelations -- riveting, inspiring, and enchanting. Brimming with lush language and a powerful voice, full of sentences crafted with surgical precision and captivating pages containing soul-soaring insight, this memoir ushers in an exhilarating era for readers and writers everywhere.-- "Eufemia Fantetti author of My Father, Fortune-tellers & Me: A Memoir"<br><br><i>Persephone's Children</i> is genius in its containers for storytelling. The misshapen ways in which our own worlds unfold scream for McCandless's knowing hands. Blood memory, truth, pain, and reconciliation with self pour through these pages. Piecing together fragments of history, residual trauma, and hope, Rowan McCandless not only discovers how to exist in this world made new, but she shows us how to suture our own wounds with expertise and love.-- "Chelene Knight, author of Dear Current Occupant and winner of the 2018 Vancouver Book Award"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Rowan McCandless is an award-winning author of fiction and creative non-fiction, and serves as the creative non-fiction editor for <i>The Fiddlehead</i>. She has been longlisted for the Journey Prize, won the Constance Rooke Creative Non-Fiction Prize, and received gold for One of a Kind Storytelling at the National Magazine Awards. Rowan lives in Winnipeg.
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