Available Formats
Motherlands: In Search of Our Inherited Cities
By (Author) Amaryllis Gacioppo
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
29th November 2022
4th August 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Civics and citizenship
640.19
Hardback
336
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
A SPECTATOR BOOK OF THE YEAR A remarkable literary debut . . . Part memoir, part travelogue, Motherlands is ultimately an investigation of how we come to understand the past at all Guardian Our creation stories begin with the notion of expulsion from our original home. We spend our lives struggling to return to the place we fit in, the body we belong in, the people that understand us, the life we were meant for. But the places we remember are ever-changing, and ever since we left, they continue to alter themselves, betraying the deal made when leaving. Australian writer Amaryllis Gacioppo has been raised on stories of original homes, on the Palermo of her mother, the Benghazi of her grandmother and the Turin of her great-grandmother. But what does belonging mean when you're not sure of where home is Is the modern nation state defined by those who flourish there or by those who arent welcome Is visiting the land of ones ancestors a return, a chance to feel complete, or a fantasy Weaving memoir and cultural history through modern political history, examining notions of citizenship, statelessness, memory and identity and the very notion of home, Motherlands heralds the arrival of a major talent that opens ones eyes to new ways of seeing.
A brilliant exploration of mixed heritage Gacioppo traces her ancestral footsteps through four cities; Turin, Benghazi, Rome and Palermo Sometimes, when Gacioppo hits a wall in her efforts to reach back in time, her solution is to enter a reverie in which she imagines what happened. These passages are deliciously written, rich and evocative. They sparkle even amid the crystalline prose of Motherlands as a whole * Guardian *
The idea of home - whether real or imagined - animates this blend of memoir and history . . . and the result is unusual, intimate, and often moving -- Matt Elton * BBC History Magazine *
Motherlands by Amaryllis Gacioppo (Bloomsbury, 20) is an appropriately hard-to-pin-down sort of book from a writer gifted with multiple heritages surveying the landscapes of her own and her familys pasts. Note: pasts necessarily in the plural, like those titular motherlands. My favourite books of this type find the big questions (belonging, memory etc) in small, concrete things: an old photo, an old building, a map. Its not a new approach, but few do it this well. -- Daniel Hahn * Spectator *
Amaryllis Gacioppo is a journalist and author with a Joint PhD in Creative Writing from Monash University and the University of Bologna. In 2015 her story 'Dreams' won the Lord Mayor of Melbourne Award for Short Story. Her writing has been shortlisted for a number of awards, including the Bristol Short Story Prize and the Scribe Nonfiction Prize. Her stories and essays have appeared in Award Winning Australian Writing, Catapult, 3:AM, and elsewhere. This is her first book.