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list price: $22.95
edition:Paperback
category: Biography & Autobiography
published: Oct 2024
ISBN:9781771669078
publisher: Book*hug Press

No Credit River

by Zoe Whittall

tagged: personal memoirs, death, lgbt
Description

It is a confusing thing to be born between generations where the one above thinks nothing is trauma and the one below thinks everything is trauma.

From acclaimed novelist and television writer Zoe Whittall comes a memoir in prose poetry that reconfirms her celebrated honesty, emotional acuity, and wit. Riving and probing a period of six years marked by abandoned love, the pain of a lost pregnancy, and pandemic isolation, No Credit River is a reckoning with the creative instinct itself.

Open and exacting, this is a unique examination of anxiety in complex times, and a contribution to contemporary autofiction as formally inventive as it is full of heart.

About the Author

Zoe Whittall

ZOE WHITTALL is the author of the short story collection Wild Failure, and five bestselling novels includ­ing The Fake, The Spectacular, The Best Kind of People, Holding Still for as Long as Possible, and Bottle Rocket Hearts. Her previous poetry collec­tions include Pre-cordial Thump, The Emily Valentine Poems, and The Best Ten Minutes of Your Life. Her work has won a Lambda Literary Award, the Writers’ Trust Dayne Ogilvie Award, and been shortlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize. She has worked as a TV writer on the Emmy-Award winning comedy show Schitt’s Creek and The Baroness Von Sketch Show for which she won a 2018 Canadian Screen Award. She was born in the Eastern Townships of Quebec and now lives in Prince Edward County, Ontario.


Editorial Review

"I think No Credit River by Zoe Whittall, deserves all the credit for not just encapsulating the complexities of queer relationships, bisexuality, middle age, or for writing a successful “poetry-prose memoir” hybrid, but for making heartbreak real and anxieties that often get hushed apparent: things that make human beings human, and sad, and vulnerable in tender, moving poems that demand rereading." —The Woodlot

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