Description

Book Synopsis
A memoir in essays, Prodigals explores the life of Sarah Beth Childers’s wildly creative brother, who committed suicide at twenty-two, and her life with him and after him, through the lens of the Biblical parable of the Prodigal Son.

Trade Review
An Appalachian childhood steeped in Pentecostalism, the Brontë siblings roaming the English moors, the New Testament parable of the Prodigal Son: Sarah Beth Childers’ memoir triangulates between these and more. From the outset, it raises the question of who the prodigal is—the younger brother Childers loved and lost, too young, to mental illness, or Childers herself, who left West Virginia and her insular family to become a writer and professor. In prose that's full of swerves and surprises, Childers tells and retells her brother’s story. This telling is an act of loving retrieval—even a kind of return. Riveting, luminous, memorable. I've read it three times and can't wait to begin again." - Jennifer Brice, author of Unlearning to Fly and Another North

"Prodigals is about the author’s grief as she explores—via memory, via writing, and via time—her brother Joshua’s mental illness and hisloss. She came from a family that did not ascribe names and diagnoses to mental illness, no lessJoshua’s, and she must not only find a variety of definitions for loss, love, and relationship but also forherself. This is a journey of self, intellect, and history, toward understanding." - Karen Salyer McElmurray, author of Wanting Radiance

"A gorgeous meditation on family, place, and loss. In revisiting the life of her beloved brother, Sarah Beth Childers insists on bearing witness to people and places as they are while contemplating those who stay and those who leave, and the wide pulsing spaces left in their wake. Captivating and clear-sighted. A beautiful book." - Sonja Livingston, author of Ghostbread

Prodigals A Sisters Memoir of Appalachia and

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    A Paperback / softback by Sarah Beth Childers

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      View other formats and editions of Prodigals A Sisters Memoir of Appalachia and by Sarah Beth Childers

      Publisher: University of Georgia Press
      Publication Date: 01/09/2023
      ISBN13: 9780820364636, 978-0820364636
      ISBN10: 0820364630

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A memoir in essays, Prodigals explores the life of Sarah Beth Childers’s wildly creative brother, who committed suicide at twenty-two, and her life with him and after him, through the lens of the Biblical parable of the Prodigal Son.

      Trade Review
      An Appalachian childhood steeped in Pentecostalism, the Brontë siblings roaming the English moors, the New Testament parable of the Prodigal Son: Sarah Beth Childers’ memoir triangulates between these and more. From the outset, it raises the question of who the prodigal is—the younger brother Childers loved and lost, too young, to mental illness, or Childers herself, who left West Virginia and her insular family to become a writer and professor. In prose that's full of swerves and surprises, Childers tells and retells her brother’s story. This telling is an act of loving retrieval—even a kind of return. Riveting, luminous, memorable. I've read it three times and can't wait to begin again." - Jennifer Brice, author of Unlearning to Fly and Another North

      "Prodigals is about the author’s grief as she explores—via memory, via writing, and via time—her brother Joshua’s mental illness and hisloss. She came from a family that did not ascribe names and diagnoses to mental illness, no lessJoshua’s, and she must not only find a variety of definitions for loss, love, and relationship but also forherself. This is a journey of self, intellect, and history, toward understanding." - Karen Salyer McElmurray, author of Wanting Radiance

      "A gorgeous meditation on family, place, and loss. In revisiting the life of her beloved brother, Sarah Beth Childers insists on bearing witness to people and places as they are while contemplating those who stay and those who leave, and the wide pulsing spaces left in their wake. Captivating and clear-sighted. A beautiful book." - Sonja Livingston, author of Ghostbread

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