Ordinary Girls: A Memoir

Author:   Jaquira Díaz
Publisher:   Workman Publishing
ISBN:  

9781643750828


Pages:   352
Publication Date:   16 June 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Ordinary Girls: A Memoir


Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Jaquira Díaz
Publisher:   Workman Publishing
Imprint:   Algonquin Books
Dimensions:   Width: 13.80cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 20.80cm
Weight:   0.260kg
ISBN:  

9781643750828


ISBN 10:   1643750828
Pages:   352
Publication Date:   16 June 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

[Ordinary Girls] belongs on your must-read lists. Diaz is a masterful writer . . . Writing with refreshing honesty, she talks about despair, depression, love, and hope with such vibrancy that her vivid portrayal will stay with you long after the final page. --O: The Oprah Magazine Every once in a while, a truly electric debut memoir comes along, and this fall, Ordinary Girls is it. It's the story of an ordinary girl; it's the story of all of the extraordinary girls. Diaz is a skilled writer; the depth of layering is strong, from the details to the larger structures of identity, white supremacy, colonialism, and brown, queer, and femme resilience and resistance. --BuzzFeed Diaz does not flinch with the hard-hitting details of growing up in communities that deserve our wholehearted attention. She complicates how we imagine girlhood and offers a beautiful memoir written with so much love, compassion and intelligence. This book is a necessary read at a time where the system and the media is so often working against the survival of women of color. This book burns in the memory and makes one feel all the feelings. A triumph! --Bustle (Angie Cruz, author of Dominicana) A dynamic examination of the power of persistence. --Time (Most Anticipated Books of Fall 2019) Outstanding. A powerful and lyrical coming-of-age story, Ordinary Girls is a candid illustration of shame, despair and violence as well as joy and triumph. Against a Puerto Rican backdrop, this debut is compassionate, brave and forgiving. --Ms. Magazine At once heartbreaking and throbbing with life in a rich portrait that's anything but ordinary. --Good Housekeeping (The 50 Best Books of 2019 to Add to Your Reading List) There's a certain ferocity throughout the entirety of Ordinary Girls. For some of the book, it's humming like a hardworking engine--concealed under the hood, always present--but then there are moments when it combusts, bursting from the page in such a way that you, as a reader, have to pause and take a breath. Ordinary Girls is an electrifying, deftly-paced debut. --Salon Diaz's resilience and writing abilities are far from ordinary; she's an emissary from an experience that many young women have. Listen. --Refinery29 A whirlwind memoir. Like Maya Angalou's seminal 1969 memoir I know Why the Caged Bird Sings before it, Ordinary Girls, is brutally honest in a way that few books dare to be. --Bitch Striking. Diaz's story is absolutely breathtaking. --NBC Latino A fierce, unflinching account of ordinary girls leading extraordinary lives. --Poets & Writers Every so often you discover a voice that just floors you--or rather, feels like it can bulldoze something in your very soul. This fall, that voice belongs to Jaquira Diaz. --The Week (25 Books to Read in the Second Half of 2019) In her debut memoir, Jaquira Diaz mines her experiences growing up in Puerto Rico and Miami, grappling with traumas both personal and international, and over time converts them into something approaching hope and self-assurance. For years, Diaz has dazzled in shorter formats--stories, essays, etc.--and her entree into longer lengths is very welcome. --The Millions


Winner of a Whiting Award for Nonfiction [Ordinary Girls] belongs on your must-read lists. Diaz is a masterful writer . . . Writing with refreshing honesty, she talks about despair, depression, love, and hope with such vibrancy that her vivid portrayal will stay with you long after the final page. --O: The Oprah Magazine Every once in a while, a truly electric debut memoir comes along, and this fall, Ordinary Girls is it. It's the story of an ordinary girl; it's the story of all of the extraordinary girls. Diaz is a skilled writer; the depth of layering is strong, from the details to the larger structures of identity, white supremacy, colonialism, and brown, queer, and femme resilience and resistance. --BuzzFeed A skilled writer, Diaz is meticulous in her craft, and on page after page her writing truly sings . . . This brutally honest coming-of-age story is a painful yet illuminating memoir, a testament to resilience in the face of scarcity, a broken family, substance abuse, sexual assault, mental illness, suicide and violence. --New York Times Book Review Incredible . . . Beautiful . . . Gorgeous and propulsive prose. --NBC / Today (Isaac Fitzgerald) Diaz does not flinch with the hard-hitting details of growing up in communities that deserve our wholehearted attention. She complicates how we imagine girlhood and offers a beautiful memoir written with so much love, compassion and intelligence. This book is a necessary read at a time where the system and the media is so often working against the survival of women of color. This book burns in the memory and makes one feel all the feelings. A triumph! --Bustle (Angie Cruz, author of Dominicana) A dynamic examination of the power of persistence. --Time (Most Anticipated Books of Fall 2019) Outstanding. A powerful and lyrical coming-of-age story, Ordinary Girls is a candid illustration of shame, despair and violence as well as joy and triumph. Against a Puerto Rican backdrop, this debut is compassionate, brave and forgiving. --Ms. Magazine At once heartbreaking and throbbing with life in a rich portrait that's anything but ordinary. --Good Housekeeping (The 50 Best Books of 2019 to Add to Your Reading List) There's a certain ferocity throughout the entirety of Ordinary Girls. For some of the book, it's humming like a hardworking engine--concealed under the hood, always present--but then there are moments when it combusts, bursting from the page in such a way that you, as a reader, have to pause and take a breath. Ordinary Girls is an electrifying, deftly-paced debut. --Salon Diaz's resilience and writing abilities are far from ordinary; she's an emissary from an experience that many young women have. Listen. --Refinery29 A whirlwind memoir. Like Maya Angalou's seminal 1969 memoir I know Why the Caged Bird Sings before it, Ordinary Girls, is brutally honest in a way that few books dare to be. --Bitch Striking. Diaz's story is absolutely breathtaking. --NBC Latino A fierce, unflinching account of ordinary girls leading extraordinary lives. --Poets & Writers Every so often you discover a voice that just floors you--or rather, feels like it can bulldoze something in your very soul. This fall, that voice belongs to Jaquira Diaz. --The Week (25 Books to Read in the Second Half of 2019) In her debut memoir, Jaquira Diaz mines her experiences growing up in Puerto Rico and Miami, grappling with traumas both personal and international, and over time converts them into something approaching hope and self-assurance. For years, Diaz has dazzled in shorter formats--stories, essays, etc.--and her entree into longer lengths is very welcome. --The Millions (Most Anticipated: The Great Second-Half 2019 Book Preview) A powerful memoir, heart-wrenching, inspiring, thoroughly engrossing, reminiscent of Mary Karr's The Liar's Club, Maya Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, and more recently Tara Westover's Educated. Through one family's story, we learn about challenges of poverty, migration, uprootedness, addiction, sexism, racism--but also about the triumphant, spirited storyteller who survives to tell the tale. Jaquira Diaz is our contemporary Scheherazade, telling stories to keep herself alive and whole, and us her readers mesmerized and wanting more. And we get it: there is more life packed on each page of Ordinary Girls than some lives hold in a lifetime. --Julia Alvarez, author of How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents and In the Time of the Butterflies


Author Information

Jaquira Diaz was born in Puerto Rico. Her work has been published in Rolling Stone, the Guardian, Longreads, The Fader, and T: The New York Times Style Magazine, and included in The Best American Essays 2016. She is the recipient of two Pushcart Prizes, an Elizabeth George Foundation grant, and fellowships from the MacDowell Colony, the Kenyon Review, and the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing. She lives in Miami Beach with her partner, the writer Lars Horn.

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