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Colleen Kinder

Forfatter af Delaying The Real World

2+ Works 193 Members 6 Reviews

Værker af Colleen Kinder

Delaying The Real World (2005) 132 eksemplarer
Letter to a Stranger: Essays to the Ones Who Haunt Us (2021) — Redaktør; Bidragyder — 61 eksemplarer

Associated Works

Twentysomething Essays by Twentysomething Writers (2006) — Bidragyder — 81 eksemplarer

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Yale University

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"Letter to a Stranger" was/is a column in Off Assignment, a nonprofit magazine. This is a beautiful, international collection of short essays.

Quotes

But this is the power of memory: the person who owns it can morph it to her desire. (Lauren Groff, 54)

It made the impossible seem possible, just by speaking it into being. (Meera Subramanian, 58)

You made it possible for me to see my childhood as something of a fable, and so to believe that it might hold the morals or rewards of a fairytale. (Madelaine Lucas, 68)

No one is guarded or unguarded for no reason. (Erica Cavanagh, 115)

I knew almost nothing about you, which is its own sort of nirvana. The small window when we can still be anyone to each other. (Jenessa Abrams, 119)

The ordinary won't expand to let the extraordinary through the door. (Colleen Kinder, 129)

As a new mother, the boundaries between me and the world had dissolved. The sturdy me, who'd so confidently navigated and made sense of the world, had vanished, and I lurched between terror and a reverent sense of oneness. (Sarah Menkedick, 137-138)

"To the Woman Who Walked Beside Me," Yonkers, New York, Sarah Perry (165-168)

When I think of you now, this is what I remember: That honest stories all end strangely. (Meg Charlton, 236)

The forward momentum of travel, like that of time itself, is a force of erasure. We move on. We leave behind. Our pasts fan out behind us like wakes on the surface of an impossibly immense flood, subsiding eventually into nothing. (Maggie Shipstead, 241)

We had been in one story. Now we were in a different one. (Carlynn Houghton, 263)

Now the story had turned into a dream story, the kind that ends when the protagonist wakes up. The kind...that makes me feel angry and betrayed as a reader, because I have invested by emotional energy in something that doesn't exist. (Carlynn Houghton, 263)

...and you just wonder all the time - Where is the thing I thought I had? Why can't I find it? (Robin Romm, 283)
… (mere)
 
Markeret
JennyArch | 2 andre anmeldelser | Apr 26, 2022 |
What a fascinating project! The form and content of the letters are perhaps as diverse as the origins of the letters themselves. Yet, at the same time, there are common themes and a universality running through all of them. All themes are ideas the reader can relate to, and all trigger an emotion. The form of the book itself triggers an emotion. Throughout this book, as I read letter after letter, strangers who touched my life come to mind.

Read my complete review at rel="nofollow" target="_top">http://www.memoriesfrombooks.com/2022/04/letter-to-stranger.html

Reviewed for NetGalley and a publisher’s blog tour.… (mere)
 
Markeret
njmom3 | 2 andre anmeldelser | Apr 7, 2022 |
There was the woman sitting in the movie theater a few seats away. I glanced at her and saw myself. My Doppelganger. Did she recognize me, as well?

And the older lady who sat down at my table in the downtown mall food court, an academic who told me that every culture has a sandwich, a meal wrapped in something.

And most of all, the woman who saw the child me standing in front of the toys in the grocery store, contemplating the cellophane bags of plastic cowboys and Indians and knights on horses and dogs of all breeds. I was seven or eight, very blond and golden-skinned from the sun, chubby with full cheeks and a round tummy, and a gap between my front teeth. She told me I would grow up to be beautiful. No one ever had said that to me. I was told I could look like Cinderella, if I lost weight. That I would grow up to be the fat lady in the circus if I didn’t lose weight. I was awestruck.

Strangers can impact our lives with indelible memories.

I was charmed by the idea of a book of letters written to the strangers who haunted people. Letters to a Stranger includes 60 short essays addressed to the person whose life intersected with the author, briefly, but with a lasting impact.

Passing Stanger! You do not know how longingly I look upon you,/You must be he I was seeking, or she I was seeking…

Walt Whitman, To a Stranger
“You, stranger, haunt the storyteller,” Coleen Kinder writes in her Introduction. I loved how contributors took me across the world to New York City, Portland, Oregon, Denmark, California, Beijing, Uganda, Peru, Berlin, Florence, Pakistan, Mexico, and even Antarctica.

The letters are arranged in themes. Symmetry, Mystery, Chemistry, Gratitude, Wonder. Remorse, Farewell.

The essays have intriguing titles. To the Boo Radley of my Childhood (Peter Turchi). To the Woman Whose Shoulder I Slept On (Keija Parssinen). To the Woman With the Restraining Order (Maggie Shipstead). To the Poet Who Disappeared (T Kira Madden).

The pandemic changed everything. We hid behind masks, swerved to avoid strangers on the sidewalk, stood distanced in line. It is good to remember when we were not afraid of strangers, when we could travel to new and sometimes uncomfortable places.

I enjoy reading these letters and the experiences they share. And they make me think of my own stories, the untold tales of the impact of strangers in my own life.

I received a free egalley from the publisher through NetGalley. My review is fair and unbiased.
… (mere)
 
Markeret
nancyadair | 2 andre anmeldelser | Aug 5, 2021 |
This book makes me want to live 30 lives, docent in a museum, volunteer in schools, and join the Peace Corps.
 
Markeret
AnnieHidalgo | 2 andre anmeldelser | May 5, 2011 |

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Associated Authors

Leslie Jamison Foreword, Contributor
Jacquelyn Mitchard Contributor
Kelly Ramsey Contributor
Emmanuel Iduma Contributor
Raksha Vasudevan Contributor
Howard Axelrod Contributor
Anna Vodicka Contributor
Meron Hadero Contributor
Sarah Menkedick Contributor
Sally Franson Contributor
Cutter Wood Contributor
T Kira Madden Contributor
Jamil Jan Kochai Contributor
Akemi Johnson Contributor
Annie Schweikert Contributor
Rachel Swearingen Contributor
Matthew Olzmann Contributor
David Parker Jr Contributor
Madelaine Lucas Contributor
Amber Meadow Adams Contributor
Ying Reinhardt Contributor
Naomi Gordon-Loebl Contributor
Margo Steines Contributor
Erica Cavanagh Contributor
Jenessa Abrams Contributor
Matthew Ozmann Contributor
Michael Agresta Contributor
Julie Lunde Contributor
Sophie Haigney Contributor
Meg Charlton Contributor
Jesse Donaldson Contributor
Aria Beth Sloss Contributor
Lucas Mann Contributor
Robin Romm Contributor
Pico Iyer Contributor
Michelle Tea Contributor
Pam Houston Contributor
Ted Conover Contributor
Elizabeth Kolbert Contributor
Peter Turchi Contributor
Peter Orner Contributor
Sarah Perry Contributor
Faith Adiele Contributor
Lauren Groff Contributor
Lia Purpura Contributor
Jeremy B. Jones Contributor
Gregory Pardlo Contributor
Irina Reyn Contributor
Julia Glass Contributor
Lavinia Spalding Contributor
Craig Mod Contributor
Alexander Lumans Contributor
Sheba Karim Contributor
Aviya Kushner Contributor
Carin Clevidence Contributor
Vanessa Hua Contributor
Emily Matchar Contributor
Kiki Petrosino Contributor
Maggie Shipstead Contributor
Keija Parssinen Contributor
Anjali Sachdeva Contributor
Rachel Yoder Contributor
Meera Subramanian Contributor
Carlynn Houghton Contributor

Statistikker

Værker
2
Also by
1
Medlemmer
193
Popularitet
#113,337
Vurdering
½ 3.7
Anmeldelser
6
ISBN
7

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