First, an
apology: I didn’t intend to focus on five male autobiographers in the week’s
posts, but it did work out that way. So here are links to five prior posts
featuring equally impressive and inspiring autobiographical works by women: Mary
Rowlandson; Sarah
Winnemucca; Jane
Addams; Dorothy
Day; and Gloria
Anzaldúa.
Following up Wednesday’s
post on William Apess, Laura
Mielke writes, “Amen! Apess will always be my hero.”
Following up Friday’s
post on Carlos Bulosan, Nancy Caronia
highlights another Depression-era story, Pietro
di Donato’s Christ in Concrete, “an
autobiographical
novel about the construction industry at the beginning of the twentieth century
and how laborers were taken advantage of. It's a true novel of the proletariat,
and heart wrenching in its construction of how unfairly Italians were treated.
And a real up close look at child labor, immigrant labor, cultural
assimilation.” She adds, “There is also Italoamericana:
The Literature of the Great Migration, 1880 to 1943, which reveals
the way in which Italians were writing (in Italian and English) about their
arrival and lives in the United States. I haven't had a chance to read it yet,
but from what I've heard, it is quite an achievement and contextualizes IA
culture in a more expansive and inclusive manner.” And she highlights two other
recent anthologies: “the new volume by co-editors Joseph
Sciorra and Edi Giunta, Embroidered Stories,
and Simone Cinotto's The
Italian American Table and Making
Italian America: Consumer Culture and the Production of Ethnic Identities.”
Thaddeus Codger highlights “George
Orwell’s Homage to Catalonia, Alison
Bechdel’s Fun Home, Thomas Merton’s The Seven Storey Mountain, and a
thousand more!”
Jana Tigchelaar mentions
“Harriet Jacobs
and Frederick
Douglass—my students are always so receptive to those.” And she adds, “I also teach Rowlandson's captivity narrative,
Franklin, and Woolman's Journal. Would like to expand to teach more.”
Ann Bane and Paul
Coleman likewise highlight Douglass as a must-read autobio—a choice that Paul calls “cliché,
perhaps, but with good reason.”
Jennifer
Berg shares Diana Athill’s Somewhere
Towards the End, noting that “she led a very neat and non-traditional
life, and MAN can she write.”
Andy
Cornick highlights Claude Brown’s autobiographical novel Manchild
in the Promised Land.
Kate
Smith goes with Haruki Murakami’s What
I Talk About When I Talk About Running, for its “intersection of
running, writing, and life.”
Chris
Blickman is “reading Nelson Mandela’s amazing Long
Walk to Freedom right now.”
Michael
Giannasca notes that “The
Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath has always fascinated me.”
Jeff
Renye highlights Kafka’s Blue
Octavo Notebooks.
Rob
LeBlanc shares Dorothy Day’s The
Long Loneliness, Bob Dylan’s Chronicles,
Volume 1, and Philip Berrigan’s Widen the Prison
Gates.
Tim
McCaffrey goes with Jim Bouton’s Ball
Four, quoting David
Halberstam: “A book deep in the American vein, so
deep in fact it is by no means a sports book.”
Patricia
Ringle Vandever shares Jesmyn Ward’s Men
We Reaped.
Sarah
Sadowski calls Eudora Welty’s One
Writer’s Beginnings “one of my all-time favorite reads.”
Rebecca
Bednarz highlights Dorothy Allison’s Two
or Three Things I Know for Sure.
And AnneMarie
Donahue shares Alice Sebold’s Lucky.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other life writings you’d highlight for the weekend post?
On Twitter, Harrison Chute (https://twitter.com/DreckFiction) adds that "Yakuza Moon was brutal."
ReplyDeleteOn Facebook, Monica Jackson adds, "Note found in a Bottle by Susan Cheever and Life with my sister Madonna by Christopher Ciccone. The second one is a biography, but is a cool/fun pop culture read. My mother-in-law is an avid reader and was a big Madonna fan, I got her this book for Christmas a couple of years ago. It's pretty addicting. I was looking at it in the store and had already finished the first chapter!"
ReplyDeleteAlso on Facebook, Grace Conner shares "Absolutely anything by David Sedaris--Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim is hilarious!"
ReplyDelete