Somehow Form a Family

Somehow Form a Family Stories That Are Mostly True

Paperback (17 May 2002)

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Publisher's Synopsis

This is the book that in hardcover won unanimous praise from reviewers, who called it "beautiful and transcendent" (The Boston Globe), a book that "measures the arc of a culture's mortality in small, personal increments" (Star Tribune, Minneapolis), is written "in a poker-faced style that always seems on the verge of exploding into manic laughter or howls of pain" (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution).

They're right. Tony Earley is a writer so good at his craft that you don't read his words so much as inhale them. His first book of nonfiction is one of those unexpected classics, like Ann Lamott's Traveling Mercies, in which a great writer rips open his/her heart and takes the reader inside for a no-holds-barred tour.

In a prose style that is deceptively simple, Earley confronts the big things-God, death, civilization, family, his own clinical depression-with wit and grace, without looking away or smirking.

Book information

ISBN: 9781565123601
Publisher: Algonquin Books
Imprint: Algonquin Books
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 192
Weight: 200g
Height: 221mm
Width: 113mm
Spine width: 15mm