A work of tremendous pleasure and tremendous pain. Leslie Jamison is so intelligent, so compassionate, and so fiercely, prodigiously brave. This is the essay at its creative, philosophical best

- Eleanor Catton, author, The Luminaries

Extraordinary, exacting [and] virtuosic... There is a glory to [her] writing that derives as much from its ethical generosity as it does from the lovely vividness of the language itself... It's hard to imagine a stronger, more thoughtful voice emerging this year

- Olivia Laing, New York Times Book Review

Extraordinary... If this is the new age of the essay, Jamison is one of the form's most compelling voices

- Elizabeth Minkel, New Statesman

Se alle

[A] fine odyssey around pain... [Jamison] fathoms deep pockets of intellectual and emotional curiosity [and] writes with surgical exactness... [A] rich feast of searching and questioning

- Marina Benjamin, Independent on Sunday

Exceptional... A fantastically assured and revealing treatment of a contemporary predicament

- Brian Dillon, Guardian

Jamison combines the intellectual rigor of a philosopher, the imagination of a novelist and a reporter's keen eye for detail in these essays, which seamlessly blend reportage, cultural criticism, theory and memoir

Los Angeles Times

Extraordinary... Her cerebral, witty, multichambered essays tend to swing around to one topic in particular: what we mean when we say that we feel someone else's pain... I'll read whatever she writes... Her tiny rogue beat box makes an indelible noise... A rare writer

New York Times

Brilliant. At times steel-cold or chilli-hot, she picks her way through a society that has lost it way, a voyeur of voyeurism. Here now comes the post-Sontag, post-modern American essay

- Ed Vulliamy, author, Amexica: War Along the Borderline

The Empathy Exams is a book of surprises, and those surprises are so smart, so elegantly arranged, and so various that you almost forget that Leslie Jamison's subject is pain, the root human subject that (of course) you almost can never forget. Her mind is so quicksilver alert, her materials so volatile, that you might also miss her poise, stamina, and authority.This is non-fiction of the most stylish and audacious sort

- Robert Polito, Graywolf Non-Fiction Prize 2012,

These essays - risky, brilliant, and full of heart - ricochet between what it is to be alive and to be a creature wondering what it is to be alive. Jamison's words, torqued to a perfect balance, shine brightly, allowing both fury and wonder to open inside us

- Nick Flynn, author, Another Bullshit Night in Suck City

Leslie Jamison has written a profound exploration into how empathy deepens us, yet how we unwittingly sabotage our own capacities for it...This riveting book will make you a better writer, a better human

- Mary Karr, author, The Liar's Club

A necessary book, a brilliant antidote to the noise of our time. Intellectually rigorous, it's also plainly personal, honest and intimate, clear-eyed about its confusions...This fierce collection's cri de cour is that we desperately need new words. Leslie Jamison comes to her subject but finds nothing ready made, or, at best, a rickety, suspect vocabulary, and so, starting over, takes her 'pain in one hand, and a lump of pure sound in the other' and crushes them together until a vital new language begins to emerge

- Charles D’Ambrosio, author, The Dead Fish Museum

Leslie Jamison threads her fine mind through the needle of emotion, sewing our desire for feeling to our fear of feeling. Her essays pierce both pain and sweetness

- Eula Bliss,

Leslie Jamison writes with her whole heart and an unconfined intelligence, a combination that gives The Empathy Exams-an inquiry into modern ways and problems of feeling-a persuasive, often thrilling authority. These essays reach out for the world, seeking the extraordinary, the bizarre, the alone, the unfeeling, and finding always what is human.

- Michelle Orange,

Jamison's scintillating essays are proof that empathy is the key to the literary imagination. Bold, surprising and insightful about the psychology of emotional life

- Roman Krznaric, author, Empathy: A Handbook for Revolution

She writes with passion and panache; her sentences are elegantly formed, her voice on the page intimate and insistent... [She is] always intelligent, self-questioning [and] willing to experiment with form... Exemplary

SF Gate

Powerful... Leslie Jamison has announced herself as [a] rising star

Boston Globe

Extraordinary

Slate

[Jamison] could be a granddaughter of Joan Didion and Susan Sontag... The Empathy Exams is their descendant, yet Jamison's blend of wit and brainy warmth is completely distinctive... Remarkable

The Atlantic

[The] essay at its finest - transformative, and here just in time

Daily Beast

Pace yourself, let each essay resound before moving on to another... Illuminating

- Max Lui, Independent

Jamison is in total command of her material, able to swing from dry precision to poetry. But it is her ability to notice and needle her own artifice that makes her work fly... Very good

- Sophie Elmhirst, Financial Times

A page-turner... Jamison is revitalising the post-Susan Sontag essay

- Joanna Biggs, Sunday Times

Thought-provoking and vivid... Jamison achieves an engaging style in which anecdote and analysis are finely balanced

- Anita Sethi, Observer

Jamison has been hailed as a startling new voice in American letters. [This] demonstrates why she's attracting such attention. She combines fearless questioning with utterly compelling story-telling

- Vanessa Baird, New Internationalist

Shockingly fresh and new. Think Sloane Crosley in a deep and contemplative email exchange with Susan Sontag

Twin Factory

It's hard to imagine a stronger, more thoughtful voice emerging this year... Extraordinary

- Olivia Laing, Scotsman

Substantial, well-read, full of research... [Jamison] is lucid and lively with a good eye for interest

- Claire Lowdon, TLS

Jamison has made something weird and rare and special and flawed. Something that plainly asks for, and deserves, our attention

Totally Dublin

Each essay is illuminating, stylish and a pleasure to read

- Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett 'Books of the Year', Guardian

Brilliant

- Sinead Gleeson ‘Book of the Year’, Irish Times

[Jamison's] charm and honesty converge with empathy for those she encounters, and for ourselves reflected in her thoughts

- Best Books of 2014, Vanity Fair

A confessional essayist, but never a bore, she's attentive to how egotistical empathy can be

Herald

Challenging and superb

Evening Standard

The subjects of this stylish and audacious collection of essays range from an assault in Nicaragua to a Morgellons meeting; from Frida Kahlo's plaster casts to a gangland tour of LA. Jamison is interested in how we tell stories about injury and pain, and the limits that circumstances, bodies and identity put on the act of describing.
Les mer
A powerful yet refreshing essay collection centred around themes of confession, illness, violence and sentimentality from an exciting new American talent
A powerful yet refreshing essay collection centred around themes of confession, illness, violence and sentimentality from an exciting new American talent

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781847088420
Publisert
2015-06-04
Utgiver
Granta Books
Vekt
173 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
14 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
240

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Leslie Jamison grew up in Los Angeles. Educated at Harvard College and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, she has also worked as an innkeeper in California, a schoolteacher in Nicaragua, and an office temp in Manhattan. She is the NewYork Times bestselling author of The Recovering and The Empathy Exams, as well as a novel, The Gin Closet. Her work has appeared in Harper's, The Atlantic,Oxford American, Virginia Quarterly Review, and the New York Times Magazine, where she is a contributing writer. She directs the graduate nonfiction program at Columbia University.