Embalming Mom: Essays in Life

Hardback Published on: 22/02/2002
Price: £23.95
UK delivery included
Not available
This product is currently unavailable
Make and edit your lists in your account
wordery
has a fantastic rating on
Not available
This product is currently unavailable
wordery
has a fantastic rating on

Synopsis

Janet Burroway followed in the footsteps of Sylvia Plath. Like Plath, she was an early Mademoiselle guest editor in New York, an Ivy League and Cambridge student, an aspiring poet-playwright-novelist in the period before feminism existed, a woman who struggled with her generation's conflicting demands of work and love. Unlike Plath, Janet Burroway survived. In sixteen essays of wit, rage, and reconciliation, Embalming Mom chronicles loss and renaissance in a life that reaches from Florida to Arizona across to England and home again. Burroway brilliantly weaves her way through the dangers of daily life-divorcing her first husband, raising two boys, establishing a new life, scattering her mother's ashes and sorting the meager possessions of her father. Each new danger and challenge highlight the tenacious will of the body and spirit to heal. "Ordinary life is more dangerous than war because nobody survives," Burroway contemplates in the essay "Danger and Domesticity," yet each of her meditations reminds us that it's our daily rituals and trials that truly keep us alive.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: University of Iowa Press
  • ISBN: 9780877457909
  • Number of pages: 139
  • Dimensions: 230 x 154 x 18 mm
  • Weight: 345g
  • Languages: English