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Her Father: A Memoir »

Book cover image of Her Father: A Memoir by Bill Henderson

Authors: Bill Henderson
ISBN-13: 9781888889161, ISBN-10: 1888889160
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Pushcart Press, The
Date Published: April 2000
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Bill Henderson

Bill Henderson is the founder and editor of the Pushcart Prize. He received the 2006 National Book Critic Circle’s Lifetime Achievement Award and the Poets & Writers / Barnes & Noble Writers for Writers Award. The founder of the Lead Pencil Club, Henderson lives in Wainscott, New York.

Book Synopsis

"Trenchant, iconoclastic, and heartfelt-in short, true."-Rick Moody

Publishers Weekly

Czeslaw Milosz, Bobbie Ann Mason, Andre Dubus and Seamus Heaney are among the more prominent of the 60-plus writers represented in this generous and stimulatingly eclectic selection of fiction, poetry and essaysthe biggest anthology in the 21-year history of the Pushcart Press. Of particular note are probing essays about the link between faith and the writer's imagination (Dubus's "Love in the Morning"), a law professor's debilitation from a stroke (George Packer's "Disorder and Early Sorrow") and the dispiriting racial Balkanization of New York (Michael Stephens's "The Last White Man in Brooklyn"). Admirable, too, are Alan Shapiro's "Fanatics," in which the author describes his falling-out with a friend from childhood, an ardent convert to Hasidic Judaism, and Michael Kaniecki's mordant, unsettling essay on the impact the Holocaust hadand continues to haveon his Polish-American family ("Love Song for the SS"). Although the fiction is less wide-ranging, working mostly in the realist epiphanic mode, much of it is first-rate. Erin McGraw's "Daily Affirmations" plays out the bleak comedy of a self-help writer clashing with her parents at Thanksgiving. Helen Schulman's "The Revisionist" affectingly chronicles the mental unraveling of a Manhattan businessman. In Ranbir Sidhu's "Neanderthal Tongues," the corpse of an anthropologist meditates upon warring factions in Ethiopia and his distance from his own roots in India. The poetry is diverse, too; of particular note are the late James Merrill's "Christmas Tree," a delightful jeu d'esprit, and Loretta Collins's coolly observant "Fetish." Henderson's anthology is a welcome annual reminder of the vigor and breadth of the smaller presses. (Nov.)

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