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Author has previously published two collections of poems, is widely published in literary outlets, and has been a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award and the Audre Lorde Poetry AwardMajor authors Terry Tempest Williams and Margaret Renkl blurbed the book and are early supportersBook's package is vibrant, inviting and features photographs and newspaper clippings used in the author's family researchBook's intimate engagement with death by suicide, family inheritance, generational trauma and grief provides opportunities for wide coverage and readership; there are very few literary memoirs about suicide in the marketplace, and SINKHOLE uniquely blends memoir and ecological elegy to explore its impact on families and communitiesAccording to the CDC, suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the U.S.; in 2019, it was responsible for more than 47,500 deaths, 12 million American adults seriously thought about suicide, 3.5 million planned a suicide attempt, and a 1.4 million attempted suicide; it is incredibly common and impacts millions of lives, despite its lingering stigma and the silence surrounding suicide in cultural conversations
Finalist for the 2023 Minnesota Book AwardA sublimely elegant, fractured reckoning with the legacy and inheritance of suicide in one American family. In 2009, Juliet Patterson was recovering from a serious car accident when she learned her father had died by suicide. His death was part of a disturbing pattern in her family. Her fatherâ¿s father had taken his own life; so had her motherâ¿s. Over the weeks and months that followed, grieving and in physical pain, Patterson kept returning to one question: Why? Why had her family lost so many men, so many fathers, and what lay beneath the silence that had taken hold?In three graceful movements, Patterson explores these questions. In the winter of her fatherâ¿s death, she struggles to make sense of the lossâ¿sifting through the few belongings he left behind, looking to signs and symbols for meaning. As the spring thaw comes, she and her mother depart Minnesota for her fatherâ¿s burial in her parentsâ¿ hometown of Pittsburg, Kansas. A once-prosperous town of promise and of violence, against people and the land, Pittsburg is now literally undermined by abandoned claims and sinkholes. There, Patterson carefully gathers evidence and radically imagines the final days of the grandfathersâ¿one a fiery pro-labor politician, the other a melancholy businessmanâ¿she never knew. And finally, she returns to her father: to the haunting subjects of goodbyes, of loss, and of how to break the cycle. A stunning elegy that vividly enacts Emily Dickinsonâ¿s dictum to âtell it slant,â? Sinkhole richly layers personal, familial, political, and environmental histories to provide not answers but essential, heartbreaking truth.
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