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Flesh & Blood
Reflections on Infertility, Family, and Creating a Bountiful Life: A Memoir
Contributors
By N. West Moss
Narrator Erin Spencer
Formats and Prices
- On Sale
- Oct 12, 2021
- Publisher
- Hachette Audio
- ISBN-13
- 9781649040817
Price
$18.99Format
Format:
- Audiobook Download (Unabridged) $18.99
- ebook $13.99 $17.99 CAD
- Hardcover $25.95 $32.95 CAD
This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around October 12, 2021. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.
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âI drive and say to myself, if I am dying, if this is how I die, then this is how I die.â When N. West Moss finds herself bleeding uncontrollably in the middle of a writing class, she manages to drive herself to the nearest hospital. Doctors are baffled, but eventually a diagnosisâuterine hemangiomaâis rendered and a hysterectomy is scheduled. In prose both lyrical and unsparing, Moss takes us along through illness, relapse, and recovery. And as her thoughts turn to her previous struggles with infertility, she reflects on kin and kinship and on what it means to leave a legacy.
Mossâs wise, droll voice and limitless curiosity lift this narrative beyond any narrow focus. Among her interests: yellow fever, good cocktails, the history of New Orleans, and, always, the natural world, including the praying mantis in her sunroom whom she names Claude. And we learn about the inspiring women in Mossâs familyâher mother, her grandmother, and her great-grandmotherâas she sorts out her feelings that this line will end with her. But Moss discovers that there are ways besides having children to make a mark, and that grief is not a stopping place but a companion that travels along with us through everything, even happiness.
A remarkably honest memoir about heartache and healing, Flesh & Blood opens up a conversation with the millions of women who live with infertility and loss.
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âFlesh Blood sparks and consoles. So frank and warm and full of humor, this book became a friend to me. I want to keep its tenderness and stunning wisdom always as my guide.âV.V. Ganeshananthan, co-host, "Fiction/Non/Fiction" podcast, Literary Hub, and author of Love Marriage âPart journey into the dark crevices of illness, but also a paean to the joys of the daily world, N. West Moss opens her arms wide and embraces the reader with her brilliantâand hilariousâobservations. This book uncovers the wonderful âbrightness in the middleâ for anyone who has navigated medical puzzles, grief, or just . . . life.ââMarie Myung-Ok Lee, author of Somebodyâs Daughter  âN. West Moss brings us on a journey that is both medical and spiritual. We experience the vertiginous churn of diagnosis and treatment, but also the liberating clarity of connection with the world. Honest, thoughtful, and courageous.ââDanielle Ofri, MD, PhD, author of When We Do Harm: A Doctor Confronts Medical Error   âA captivating, multilayered story of perseverance. It turns out that the real subject of Flesh Blood is not so much illness as the authorâs ever-regenerating powers of vision, her appreciation of the tangible world, the beauty of the here and now.ââZachary Lazar, author of Vengeance  âAn amazing book! Moss has a gift for describing stones, plants, celery soup and even praying mantises as needed accompaniments to sickness and recovery, along with her kind husband and generous mother. Her singular stories, honesty, and sly humor infuse this memoir of illness not with sadness, but joy.ââTheresa Brown, New York Times bestselling author of The Shift âWith a series of gentle incisions, this memoir cuts deep. Moss shows us a grief and gladness that, until now, we could not name.ââMartha Witt, author of Broken As Things Are Â
âJackie Polzin, author of Brood
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âN. West Moss is an exemplary talent. The words come alive on the page. You feel as though you are living inside this luminous book.â
âLuis Alberto Urrea, author of The House of Broken Angels
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âRemarkable . . . Delightful . . . [Moss has] an admirably light touch in describing adversity.â
âMinneapolis Star Tribune
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âThe few-page chapters are warm slices of life . . . Warm and humorous writing enlivens a memoir of chronic illness and infertility.â
âShelf Awareness
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âA moving, well-rendered portrait of the seriously ailing artist. Her careful, lovely sentences and good-humored and thoughtful observations seem to be . . . a part of her healing . . . A healing balm, this inviting memoir lights a path through grief and illness.â
âKirkus Reviews, starred review
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â[A] powerful account of [Mossâs] decades-long battle with infertility . . . In poetic language thatâs by turns blunt and tender, Moss chronicles how she and her husband weathered their sorrow and surfaced from it, dignity still intact, their love âmade up of the things we couldnât give to one another, but also full of how hard we tried.â This is as an enriching addition to the canon of literature around infertility.â
âPublishers Weekly
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âMossâs meditations on questions her experience have raised are full of calm maturity and quiet humor and give this book an appeal beyond its expected audience . . . Mossâs contemplations on life in general will resonate with women who are seeking peace and meaning in their own lives.â
âLibrary Journal
âN. West Moss doesn't romanticize our world; she loves it honestly, in all its messiness. As I read Flesh Blood I saw not only that world but also the human body anew. This memoir is a tender, elegant, wry meditation on being a woman, being sick, and recovering; on reading and nature; on loving foremothers and rendering them into history with word rather than womb."