How does reading about others become a bridge we use to cross back and forth between a lost dead self and the shaky promise of a new? In <i>Shadow Work</i>, Anderson sits down with her favorite authors—Zadie Smith, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Lewis Carroll, Shakespeare, Percival Everett—to discuss how they provide an invisible structure that supports creative work. Through a rigorous excavation of the power of the book, Anderson brings herself—and her readers—back to life.
- Robin Coste Lewis, National Book Award–winning author of <i>Voyage of the Sable Venus and Other Poems</i>,
In these remarkable essays, Anderson’s bright curiosity lures readers toward philosophers’ metaphors, through horses’ stables, and into children’s backpacks; she draws insights equally from the threads of plots and the sinews of joints. <i>Shadow Work</i> may begin with loneliness, but it offers up the best kind of company: visceral and cerebral, unrepentantly bookish, and, most importantly, honest and warm.
- Sarah Mesle, senior editor at large, <i> Los Angeles Review of Books </i>,
<i>Shadow Work</i> makes legible the invisible labor—and love—of reading, writing, and parenting. Anderson beautifully captures the companionship and solace provided by books. Her own book does the same, offering insight, connection, and deeply felt humanity.
- Julia Lee, author of <i>Biting the Hand: Growing Up Asian in Black and White America</i>,
Emily Hodgson Anderson is a mother of young sons, an eighteenth-century British literature scholar, a long-distance runner, an accomplished equestrian, and a reader of raunchy British romance novels. She believes in the ability of the human mind—and its great metaphor, language—to lend “access to that illusory and intoxicating kind of ‘knowing’ not otherwise possible in real life.” Each brilliant essay contained herein celebrates the shadowy geographies of reading where we grope about and find one another, though find one another we do indeed. Machines, as powerful as they may be, can’t tease out a human soul. <i>Shadow Work</i> shows us how, on this “darkling plain,” to seek any other human creature’s heart and mind.
- Michelle Latiolais, author of <i>A Proper Knowledge</i>,
A graceful literary memoir.
Kirkus Reviews
For this project [Anderson] employs a free-associative prose style, a narrative voice that is musing, wry, questioning and hesitant, and a tone that modulates from cheerful to self-deprecating.
Times Literary Supplement
Anderson’s readings are interwoven with memories of her childhood and accounts of raising her two sons. Anderson grew up surrounded by books and scholarship. “Books were offered to us as a form of comfort, companionship, and rest,” she writes, and this gentle, amiable volume provides a similar gift.
Yale Alumni Magazine
Shadow Work puts writers such as Jane Austen, Mary Shelley, Laurence Sterne, and Shakespeare into unexpected conversations with authors of children’s literature and contemporary fiction, among them Roald Dahl, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Zadie Smith, and Lewis Carroll. Elegantly and poignantly written, this book examines what it means to revisit longtime literary companions and how literature can help us better understand what we show and hide about ourselves.
Introduction: Loneliness and the Literary Life
Part I. Losing
1. The Shadow Life of Books: William Shakespeare, William Hazlitt, Alexander Chee
2. Reading to a Child: Roald Dahl, Shakespeare, T. H. White
3. The Detective’s Mind: Arthur Conan Doyle
4. Shaking Hands: Ludwig Wittgenstein, Percival Everett
5. Pool of Tears: Lewis Carroll
6. Obedience Training: John Milton, William Koehler
Part II. Longing
7. Perfection and Platonic Love: Plato, Aristotle
8. (An Aside): Shakespeare
9. The One and Only Jane: Jane Austen
10. Of Pain, Paralysis, and Pursuit: Samuel Beckett, Mary Shelley
Part III. Loving
11. Shadow Work: J. M. Barrie, Toni Morrison, Mark Twain
12. Animal Love: Miguel de Cervantes, Jilly Cooper, Laurence Sterne
13. Pioneer Girl: Laura Ingalls Wilder
14. The Efficiency Expert: William Wordsworth, Frank and Ernestine Gilbreth
15. Invisible Labor, Invisible Hands: Adam Smith, Zadie Smith
16. No Room of One’s Own: Homer, Virginia Woolf
Notes
Bibliography
Index