Such a life / Lee Martin.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780803236479 (pbk. : alk. paper)
- ISBN: 0803236476 (pbk. : alk. paper)
- Physical Description: 214 p. ; 22 cm.
- Publisher: Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, c2012.
Content descriptions
Formatted Contents Note: | Colander -- Never thirteen -- Drunk man -- You want it? -- The fat man skinny -- Who causes this sickness? -- Such a life -- Twan't much -- Election season -- The classified ad -- A backward spring -- Somniloquy -- Take, eat -- Not at this address -- All those fathers that night. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Martin, Lee, 1955- > Childhood and youth. Authors, American > Homes and haunts > Illinois. |
Search for related items by series
Holds
0 current holds with 0 total copies.

Publishers Weekly Review
Such a Life
Publishers Weekly
Martin's latest book (after From Our House) is a collection of essays exploring family, memory, the act of writing the past, and the author's childhood and adolescence in Southern Illinois. "What did I know then of the noise our living makes?" Martin asks in the subtly moving "Colander," a meditation on his relationship with his mother and her pronunciation of the titular utensil ("I thought she said calendar"), which caused him to mistake her voice for that of his aunt. In "A Backward Spring," Martin draws a profound parallel between the bizarrely hard winter of 1830 that ruined a season of crops in the town of Egypt, Ill., and his mother-in-law's Alzheimer's, which makes Martin "determined. to be kind to her" in her inability to remember. In "Who Causes This Sickness?" he ruminates on his father's loss of his hands in a farming accident, and his own health issues, as a way of investigating the integrity of the narratives we impose on our experiences: "It's the story I told myself then, not knowing that there was another narrative running beneath it." Indeed, though his latest may be just one iteration of many possible tellings of his life, Martin's honest and well-paced prose makes the repeated attempts feel fresh, and most of all, worth it. (Mar. 1) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

BookList Review
Such a Life
Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
If you ask him face-to-face, novelist Martin may not admit that he was once fat, but he does in print. In this third memoir, he reveals many moments of failure and embarrassment, beginning with a comic account of how as a boy his misunderstanding a word over the telephone became an often recounted family story. It is a rare light moment in a mostly bittersweet portrayal of life in a small town in southern Illinois, an area known as Little Egypt. Propelled by anger inherited from his father, a farmer who lost both of his hands in a corn-picker accident, Martin became for a time a teenage shoplifter, arsonist, and alcoholic, bent on behaviors that upset his parents, but his love of reading and writing helped him reform. Many of his autobiographical essays begin with him far removed from his hometown, a successful English professor looking back on an awkward and painful childhood, a situation with which many readers may identify. Both frank and compassionate, Martin's tales will entertain memoir readers as well as fans of his novels.--Roche, Rick Copyright 2010 Booklist