8: All True - Unbelievable
By (Author) Amy Fusselman
Counterpoint
Counterpoint
3rd April 2007
United States
General
Non Fiction
813.6
Hardback
130
Width 150mm, Height 220mm
245g
In this gorgeously elliptical memoir, the acclaimed author of "The Pharmacist's Mate" examines motherhood, childhood and the unexpected effects of past events and present actions. The mania of early motherhood, the intimacy of marriage and the quest for healing are raw materials from which critically acclaimed writer Amy Fusselman has wrought her latest work - a daring exploration of the perversities of time. The same idiosyncratic and inimitable form Fusselman created in the astonishingly original "The Pharmacist's Mate" - short, staccato paragraphs, some reading like journal entries - lends intimacy to her reflections and observations. From her experiences with the man she calls 'my paedophile' to the more domestic trials of sleep training her infant son or her obsession with a Beastie Boys song, Fusselman moves from one subject to the next with the freeform exuberance of a child at play. Sometimes the topic is abstract and grand, such as her contemplation of what Time is; other times, she focuses on the seemingly trivial and mundane aspects of life. The idea of learning through repetition and the automatic motions of humans are metaphorically represented by the countless figure eights she performed as a child on the ice. Family is ever present in 8, and Fusselman writes with inclusive tenderness, extending this intimacy to the reader as well. Her efforts to come to terms with the ideas of innocence, aging and the healing power of touch draw the reader in still deeper - the uplifting revelations staying with you long after the last page is turned.
"Fusselman makes the world strange again, a place where dying and making life are equally mysterious and miraculous activities."
"This sweet, sincere story of Fusselman's attempts to get pregnant and to come to terms with her father's death is told in a wholly original epigrammatic style--the encapsulated meditations of a woman taking life as it comes, beat by beat."
"Weaving together tales of her attempts to get pregnant with entries from her recently deceased father's journal, Fusselman delivers a memoir both endearingly eccentric and enduringly innovative."
Amy Fusselman's writing has appeared in McSweeney's, Jane and Art News. She lives with her husband and two sons in New York City.