Madder: A Memoir in Weeds
By (Author) Marco Wilkinson
Coffee House Press
Coffee House Press
18th January 2022
United States
General
Non Fiction
LGBTQ+ Studies / topics
635.092
Paperback
152
Width 127mm, Height 196mm
Madder, matter, matera weed, a state of mind, a material, a meaning, a mother. Essayist and horticulturist Marco Wilkinson searches for the roots of his own selfhood among family myths and memories.
My life, these weeds. Marco Wilkinson uses his deep knowledge of undervalued plants, mainly weedsinvisible yet ubiquitous, unwanted yet abundant, out-of-place yet flourishingas both structure and metaphor in these intimate vignettes. Madderoffers a mesmerizing portrait of cultivating belonging in an uprooted world.
WBUR Fall Books Reading List Lambda Literary Review, Octobers Most Anticipated LGBTQIA+ Literature Experimental, intimate, and sensual, Madder is a thrilling debut. Alta "A sensuous memoir, laid out in impressionistic vignettes, reflecting on rootedness, loss, and the solace of nature . . . evokes, as well, vibrant details of burrs and burdock, madder and thistles, moss and fungi. Nature yields mysteries and metaphor." Kirkus Wilkinson portrays his restless uncertainty in regards to his paternity, his familys immigration status, and his queer identity. But Wilkinson (now a horticulturist) triumphs when he is able to put down roots. Katherine Ouelette, WBUR "Wilkinsons memoir looks at the entangled stories of his upbringing, lineage, and sexuality. . . . [His] narrative shines in the lines of verse interspersed throughout." Publishers Weekly Plant life is more than metaphor in the enthralling Madder. Rather, its a way into rethinking self, origin, the body, sexuality, spiritthe very idea of limit. In language both majestic and down to earth, Marco Wilkinson conjures up a manual for living, animated, exacting, and true to its darkness. A major achievement.Paul Lisicky, author of Later: My Life at the Edge of the World In the lush ecotone between poetry and prose, Marco Wilkinson, horticulturalist and caretaker of all things underseen, has propagated an extraordinary space where the lost are found, one way or another, and cradled. Wilkinson has the rare ability to confront all that is deliberately hidden and at the same time protect the most delicate mysteries from harm. This utterly gorgeous, learned, tender treatise on kinship and the ecology of memory just knocked me out. Lia Purpura Madder: A Memoir in Weeds is a reminder of lifes messiness, of its wild beauty, minor consequence, and major ripples. Beautifully written with a concise, poetic prose, this hybrid work explores the ache in all of us, that space continually growing, grown over, starting anew with the seasons. Wilkinson treads the line between meaning and matter with exquisite attention, energy, and reverence. Kao Kalia Yang Marco WilkinsonsMadderis a memoir unlike any Ive encountered, with its unique lyricism, innovation of form, and virtuosic experimentation with memory. Its part meditation on the nature of weeds and fungi; part critique of colonial narratives of invasive species; and part story of a life lived across borders, in the wreckage of familial absences and un-memories, things not unknown. I am in awe of this books fortitude to imagine a pilgrimage out of a past that haunts because it does not change. How can we tell a story if it never changes When it is only the same thing always and forever This book is a revelation in symbiosis, erasure, substitution, and fragment. It is a little root swept up, a burr, a transgenerational seed from Uruguay to Rhode Island, New York, and the underground rhizome of a midwestern forest. I marvel at what Wilkinson has accomplished in exploring the resilience of plants we have deemed unwanted; their memory, like ours, buried in the dirt.Marcelo Hernandez Castillo
Marco Wilkinson has been a horticulturist, a farmer, and an editor. He has taught literature and creative writing at Oberlin College; University of California, San Diego; James Madison University; and Antioch Universitys MFA program, and has taught horticulture and sustainable agriculture at Lorain County Community College and MiraCosta College. He has been the recipient of an Ohio Arts Council Award for Individual Excellence and fellowships from the Hemera Foundation, Craigardan, and the Bread Loaf Environmental Writers Conference. Madder is his first book.