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OverviewThe debut collection of a writer whose accolades precede her: a Whiting Award, a Rona Jaffe Award, a Best American Essays selection, and a Pushcart Prize, all received before her first book-length publication. This book represents a major break-out of an entirely new brand of nonfiction writer, in a mode like that of Ander Monson, John D'Agata, and Eula Biss, but a new sort of beast entirely its own. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Amy LeachPublisher: Milkweed Editions Imprint: Milkweed Editions Country of Publication: Canada Dimensions: Width: 14.10cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 20.50cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9781571313348ISBN 10: 1571313346 Pages: 185 Publication Date: 19 June 2012 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsThis debut collection by Leach, winner of a Whiting Writers' Award and a Pushcart Prize, explores fantastical and curious subjects pertaining to natural phenomena....The author's appreciation for absurdity and the joys of wildlife infuses her pieces with a childlike suspension of disbelief; her descriptions strike a balance between imagination and science, with dashes of magical realism, and some of her wording is far more similar to poetry than prose...this is a bonbon of a book. <br> -- Kirkus <br> Of all the wondrous things that are catalogued in this brave little book, the most wondrously fresh and novel may be the uncanny Ms Leach's own gamin-sly, rhythm-rhymey voice, and oh that flint-flighty, rapt-capacious mind of hers. Besides which, no one conjures a presenter present tense than she. Sheer scrambling delight. <br>--Lawrence Weschler, author of Mr Wilson's Cabinet of Wonder and Uncanny Valley <br> Like a descendant of Lewis Carroll and Emily Dickinson, Amy Leach, with her endless fascination and lucid intelligence, brings us a new meaning of seeing the world without us, and within. With no agenda but her own curiosity, Leach approaches her subjects with the sensitivity of Dickinson, and finds sense in the nonsensical, and vice versa, like Carroll. A reader, going into this book to learn a little more about the universe, will exit knowing much more about her own self. At once large and intimate, these essays introduce one of the most exciting and original writers in America. <br>--Yiyun Li, author of Gold Boy, Emerald Girl and The Vagrants <br> I know of no other writer on earth - or in the sky - like Amy Leach. One of the pleasures of Things That Are is the surprise of finding, among the mouldywarps and whimwhams and leguminous exoplanets of our galaxy, truths about ourselves - unearthed and unaired. <br>--Eula Biss, author of Notes from No Man's Land <br> Loopy, mad-hatterish, infernally addictive writing that makes you sneeze. Advance Praise for Things That Are <br> Of all the wondrous things that are catalogued in this brave little book, the most wondrously fresh and novel may be the uncanny Ms Leach's own gamin-sly, rhythm-rhymey voice, and oh that flint-flighty, rapt-capacious mind of hers. Besides which, no one conjures a presenter present tense than she. Sheer scrambling delight. <br>--Lawrence Weschler, author of Mr Wilson's Cabinet of Wonder and Uncanny Valley <br> Like a descendant of Lewis Carroll and Emily Dickinson, Amy Leach, with her endless fascination and lucid intelligence, brings us a new meaning of seeing the world without us, and within. With no agenda but her own curiosity, Leach approaches her subjects with the sensitivity of Dickinson, and finds sense in the nonsensical, and vice versa, like Carroll. A reader, going into this book to learn a little more about the universe, will exit knowing much more about her own self. At once large and intimate, these essays introduce one of the most exciting and original writers in America. <br>--Yiyun Li, author of Gold Boy, Emerald Girl and The Vagrants <br> I know of no other writer on earth - or in the sky - like Amy Leach. One of the pleasures of Things That Are is the surprise of finding, among the mouldywarps and whimwhams and leguminous exoplanets of our galaxy, truths about ourselves - unearthed and unaired. <br>--Eula Biss, author of Notes from No Man's Land <br> Loopy, mad-hatterish, infernally addictive writing that makes you sneeze. <br>--David Abram, author of Becoming Animal <br> I haven't seen such imagination and magical use of language in nature writing since I first read Annie Dillard's Pilgrim at Tinker Creek. Spend some time with Amy Leach and your perception of the world will inevitably be altered. <br>--Dale Szczeblowski, Porter Square Books, Cambridge, MA <br> If you love words and the natural world, Amy Leach will lead you through the world with new eyes. Amy Leach invi . . . The sheer audacity of her invention . . . the constant bridge too far she manages to cross as she's building it. [Her] prose is shimmering, filled with vitality and astonishing intelligence. The moments where she makes a swerve into larger philosophic observation are absolutely mind-blowing, as is the sense the pieces provide of everything we're about to lose. She is a true original, has a remarkable mind, a glorious imagination, and shares her fascination with the largest and smallest things of this world. <br>-- comments from the Whiting Writers' Award Prize Committee<br><br> Author InformationSince receiving her MFA from the University of Iowa in 2005, Amy Leach has been recognized with the Whiting Writers' Award (2010), a Best American Essays selection (2009), a Rona Jaffe Foundation Award (2008), and a 2011 Pushcart Prize. Her essays have appeared in numerous literary journals and reviews, including Tin House, Orion Magazine, A Public Space, and Los Angeles Review. She lives in Chicago, where she plays the piano, performs in a bluegrass band, and teaches writing at Loyola and Northwestern Universities. <p>Q&A with Amy Leach, author of Things That Are <br>Your essays peer into the often-overlooked phenomena of the natural world; what do you hope your readers will gain from your writings? <br>Amy Leach: Someone told me that animals are disappearing from our dreams. It is sad, and impoverishing, that animals are underrepresented in our imagination, our art, and our lives. One of the things I was trying to do, in writing these essays, was furnish my own imagination with various creatures, various lives, various experiences of the world. This project brought me a lot of joy, and joy is what I'd hope to share with readers. <br>What is your favorite word, whether real or made-up? When you love a word, do you fill your pages with it or save it for the perfect moment? <br>Amy Leach: My favorite word is dog and I could say it all day long, though I restrained myself in the writing of this book from sprinkling every sentence with dogs. It was interesting rereading the essays all together and noticing which words turn up repeatedly, like oblivious. I think I am always writing it down in my notebook as a word to use, oblivious to the fact that I have already used it many times. I also love the word sheep and am not temperate in using it. <br>Space dust, pea tendrils, frogs from Borneo, and the Earth's mousy core-your essays range wildly between species and phenomena. Where do you pull inspiration from? Have you ever pulled a dictionary of natural history off a shelf, opened it to a page, and simply said, I think I'll write about the Pinwheel Galaxy today ? <br>Amy Leach: A friend shipped me a 24-volume wildlife encyclopedia several years ago, and that has certainly provided frog inspiration and mouse inspiration. Sometimes inspiration came circuitously: the pea-tendril essay started out as a cabbage essay, and the panda bear essay started out as an essay about neutrinos, with panda bears as minor characters; in both cases I had to abandon my first subject for one that interested me more. Of course sometimes inspiration arrives more directly: seeing bright red mushrooms in the forest, squirrels chasing each other underneath ferns, moths walking across parking lots. <br>What about research outside the encyclopedia? Do you seek out natural phenomena off the page? <br>Amy Leach: Writing each essay was its own complete experience. While I was writing Silly Lillies, I bicycled up to the botanic garden every other day to admire the huge ruffly lotus leaves and the pink water lily blossoms. For the writing of the The Wild What, I was in the Adirondacks where the stars shine unimpeded, and every night, after writing about the Great Bear all day, I could sit outside and appreciate the Great Bear itself. <br>The book includes a Glossary of Strange Beasts and Phenomena which contains entries that seem almost too fantastical to believe-did you invent any of these, or are they really all true? <br>Amy Leach: Besides Planet Huffenpuff, I did not invent any of the words in the Glossary. But it was fun excavating old fantastic words and doing my part to restore to them their former privileges. Defining them, at the end of the book, took me back to fifth grade; I remember in fifth grade writing my own definitions of words; it's as fun as it ever was. <br> Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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