Vivian Gornick

Approaching Eye Level 1996

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‘It is [Gornick’s] particular genius to make readers feel what they are thinking … Brilliant, compelling, and cohesive.’ — Los Angeles Times

A classic essay collection, published for the first time in the UK, from the author of Fierce Attachments, recently voted the ‘Best Memoir of the Past 50 Years’ by the New York Times.

In this collection of seven personal essays, Vivian Gornick explores her need for conversation and connection, whether she’s walking the bustling streets of New York or teaching writing in sleepy university towns.

She looks back on charged summers waitressing in the Catskills, a failed friendship with an older woman and mentor, the feminist movement of the 1970s, and celebrates the moments of random recognition that are part of life in the city.

In writing that is stylish, sharp and incisive, Gornick cuts through to the heart of what it is to experience longing, loneliness, intimacy and
self-recognition.

‘There’s more to these seven original essays than a hymn to Manhattan. There is also exploration of that most brutal and unconquerable of human sorrows, loneliness … Without even a flicker of self-pity, these short pieces bear rereading many times.’ — Publishers Weekly

‘At heart this is a book not about repose but about escalating struggle — the day-to-day struggle to face down the brutality of growing loneliness, to accept the limitations of friendship and intimacy, to honor the process of becoming oneself.’ — Mary Hawthorne, New York Times
This book is currently unavailable
154 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2020
Publication year
2020
Publisher
Daunt Books
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Quotes

  • Sandra Sánchezhas quoted3 years ago
    Others made me a slave but I must squeeze the slave out of myself, drop by drop.
  • Sandra Sánchezhas quoted3 years ago
    I discovered that people introduced subjects in order to allude, not to discuss.
  • Sandra Sánchezhas quoted3 years ago
    For each man the sentences the other spoke had become an infliction – and then a wound.
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