<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p><strong>Both a philosophical novel and a coming-of-age story, <em>Like Wings, Your Hands</em> explores a mother-son relationship in the context of disability and interdependence.</strong></p><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Kalina, born in Bulgaria and now living in Boston, has always been a spiritual seeker. Her fourteen-year-old son, Marko, who has spina bifida and is partially paralyzed, shares her curiosity about larger metaphysical questions, but also has his own unique perspective on life: Marko perceives numbers as having colors, shapes, and textures--and they're linked to emotions: embarrassment, for example, is fourteen; satisfaction is sixty-seven.</p> <p>Kalina is determined to respect her son's dignity and privacy as he embarks on the new terrain of adolescence, complicated as it is by his continued physical dependence on her care. She has other issues to wrestle with as well, including coming to understand her own life choices and her strained relationship with her father. Meanwhile, Marko, already expert at deep meditation, discovers a technique that allows him to experience a sense of boundlessness and also gain surprising insights into himself, his mother, and the grandfather he's never met.</p> <p>Both a philosophical novel and a coming-of-age story, <em>Like Wings, Your Hands</em> explores a mother-son relationship in the context of disability and interdependence, while also raising questions about the nature of time and space and the limitless capacities of the human mind.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>In her frank, clear prose, Earley moves through multiple places and characters with startling ease, building a world at once honest and graceful.<br/> <strong>-- Aimee Bender, author of <em>The Color Master</em>, a <em>New York Times</em> Notable book</strong></p> <p>Urgent, essential, and previously untold, <em>Like Wings, Your Hands </em>offers readers a voice and perspective glaringly absent in the history of literature. Although that fact alone should be sufficient to make Elizabeth Earley's novel required reading, readers will ultimately keep turning the pages for the intimacy and innovation of this passionately necessary book.<br/> <strong>-- Gina Frangello, author of <em>A Life in Men </em>and <em>Every Kind of Wanting </em></strong></p> <p>Elizabeth Earley has written a stunningly original novel--one that breaks ground as it breaks silences, one that thrums with insight and compassion and devastating beauty. Entering <em>Like Wings, Your Hands </em> feels like entering the dream box constructed by one of its characters--it catapults us through space and time, zooming us in to the cellular level and blasting us out to the stars. I love this book with 100% of my heart.<br/> <strong>-- Gayle Brandeis, author of <em>The Book of Dead Birds</em>, a Bellwether Prize recipient</strong></p> <p>A helixing of the various incapacities of our bodies, <em>Like Wings, Your Hands </em>embraces the courage of yearning and the hopeful escape of dreams. Elizabeth Earley is bold and real and unapologetically political and all the things every writer strives for--and profound, absolutely profound.<br/> <strong>-- Lily Hoang, author of <em>Changing</em>, a PEN Open Books Award recipient</strong></p> <p><em>Like Wings, Your Hands </em>takes us into a world that exists all around us, yet few of us even see. It's a place of raw and heartbreaking human experience, and Elizabeth Earley has revealed its unique language: elemental, luminous, and beautiful.<br/> <strong>-- Peter Nichols, author of <em>The Rocks</em></strong></p><br>
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