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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: H is for Hawk, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Through NEGROLAND Margo Jefferson elevates the memoir form, and leaves me grateful, again

It was Margo Jefferson, the great cultural critic, who first put my name in the New York Times. In a review of another's book, in a closing paragraph, she made mention of something I'd penned in solitude and put forward with innocence and didn't even understand as well as she seemed to.

She looked up and saw me, and I, discovering her snatch of words quite by accident, never felt such gratitude.

When I read earlier this year that Margo had written a memoir called Negroland, I wanted it at once, bought it when I could, and put it on the top of a pile called (in my mind), "the books you'll be allowed to read once you have completed your tour of duty with all known responsibilities."

Yesterday I was done with all known (until next week) responsibilities. I picked up Negroland. I read.

And oh my, oh now: this. Like H is for Hawk, like M Train, like My Life as a Foreign Country, Negroland is the kind of book that elevates not just its readers but the capital M Memoir itself. It's personal—and otherwise. It's I, You, We. It's inquiry, declaration, admission, confusion—the story of the impossible ideals, hurtful expectations, pleasant privileges, and chaotic undertows that have been all bound up with being a member of the black elite. It's a book by an esteemed critic who was "taught to distinguish (her)self through presentation, not declaration, to excel through deeds and manners, not showing off" and who then (but always judiciously, always for a higher purpose) allows us in.

In a book of anecdote, history, cultural expose, and yearning, we encounter, on almost every page paragraphs as searing as this:
Privilege is provisional. Privilege can be denied, withheld, offered grudgingly, and summarily withdrawn. Entitlement is impervious to the kinds of verbs that modify privilege. Our people had to work, scrape for privilege, gobble it down when those who would snatch it away weren't looking.
 And this:
Being an Other, in America, teaches you to imagine what can't imagine you. That's your first education. Then comes the second. Call it your social and intellectual change. The world outside you gets reconfigured, and inside too. Patterns deviate and fracture. Hierarchies disperse. Now you can imagine yourself as central. It feels grand. But don't stop there. Let that self extend into other narratives and truths.
This year, when my beautiful son goes into bookstores he goes straight (his mother's child) to the memoir shelves. He, like me, views memoir as one of the best chances we have of broadening our vision, breaking down our walls, stepping out of our recklessly limited world view.

I have been taught by Margo Jefferson with her gorgeous Negroland. I have seen a little further. I have hurt a little more. I have been made grateful for both the seeing and the hurting.

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2. Amazon Picks Its Best Books of the Year So Far

H-is-for-HawkJust in time for beach reading, Amazon has revealed its Best Books of 2015 (So Far) list.

Amazon’s team of editors selected the list of 20 books. According to Amazon, the selection process included a ton of debate. However, the top book on the list was chosen unanimously: Helen MacDonald’s H is for Hawk. We’ve got the entire list for you after the jump.

Amazon’s Best Books of 2015 (So Far)

  • H is for Hawk, Helen MacDonald
  • An Ember in the Ashes, Sabaa Tahir
  • Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of Lusitania, Erik Larson
  • Ghettoside: A True Story of Murder in America, Jill Leovy
  • The Sympathizer, Viet Than Nguyen
  • All the Old Knives: A Novel, Olen Steinhauer
  • Saint Mazie: A Novel, Jamie Attenberg
  • The Wright Brothers, David McCullough
  • The Book of Speculation: A Novel, Erika Swyler
  • Green on Blue: A Novel, Elliot Ackerman
  • The Nightingale, Kristin Hannah
  • Golden Son: Book II of The Red Rising Trilogy, Pierce Brown
  • Missoula: Rape and the Justice System in a College Town, Jon Krakauer
  • Dietland, Sarai Walker
  • Orhan’s Inheritance, Aline Ohanesian
  • Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, Yuval Noah Harari
  • The Wonder Garden, Lauren Acampora
  • Between You & Me: Confessions of a Comma Queen, Mary Norris
  • My Struggle: Book Four, Karl Ove Knausgaard
  • The Girl on the Train, Paula Hawkins
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    3. Helen Macdonald's Magnificent H Is for Hawk, in New York Journal of Books

    I became obsessed with birds with the passing of my mother. The way they came to me. The way they called to me. The hollow of their bones. The other women, throughout time, who have buried their hearts in wings and feathers. This was the subject of my sixth memoir, Nest. Flight. Sky.: On Love and Loss, One Wing at a Time. This is the subject, again, of One Thing Stolen, the obsession that lies at the heart of that book.

    And so when I began to read of Helen Macdonald's new memoir, H Is for Hawk, already a bestseller in England, I became desperate for the time to read that book myself. Over the past two days I have done just that, then sorted through my thoughts to write a review for the New York Journal of Books, where I'll now be penning my thoughts on literary adult fiction, memoir, and literary young adult novels.

    The other day one of my students asked me to name my favorite memoir—an impossible question, of course. But now, whenever I'm asked that question, I'll be whispering Helen Macdonald's name. This is a book. Oh. This is a book.

    The full review can be found here.

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    4. H is For Hawk Takes 2014 Costa Book Award

    H is for Hawk by Helen MacDonald has won the 2014 Costa book prize. The author will take home a £30,000 prize for the memoir, which tells her personal account of training a goshawk in order to deal with the death of her father.

    “All of the judges felt passionately about this book and its wonderful, muscular, chiseled prose,” explained Robert Harris, chair of the final judges, in a statement. “This is a clever, accomplished piece of writing that everyone will enjoy. It melds a memoir about grief, a biography of TH White and is a wonderful evocation of nature and training a hawk. It’s unique, unforgettable, haunting and a natural book to win this prize.”

    Zoe Gilbert won the 2014 Costa Short Story Award for her story, “Fishskin, Hareskin.” She will take home £3,500 in prize money.

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