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Overview""Honest and moving."" --Psychology Today Full Product DetailsAuthor: Elizabeth TallentPublisher: HarperCollins Publishers Inc Imprint: Collins Dimensions: Width: 13.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 20.10cm Weight: 0.181kg ISBN: 9780062410399ISBN 10: 0062410393 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 28 July 2023 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsHonest and moving. -- Psychology Today A singular and haunting memoir...The book approaches the mysteries, gaps and obstacles in Tallent's own story with the same psychological precision and elliptical motivation she applies to her fictional characters...Elizabeth Tallent's gift has never been in doubt...She has written a subtle and idiosyncratic account that tries to elucidate her decades-long writer's block even as she recognizes that--as with so much in anyone's life--she cannot fully grasp it. I'm not sure I've ever read a memoir quite like this, one that spills its many dark secrets with so little self-pity, so much acuity and such a deliberate lack of authorial certitude. -- Daphne Merkin, New York Times Book Review [Scratched is] a harrowing story of overcoming perfectionism, leavened by [Tallent's] dry wit and precise, poetic use of language. . . . This book is a record of Tallent's struggle to show her scratches and to believe, as her young son tells her one day after spilling a glass of milk, 'Everybody makes mistakes.' -- Associated Press Fascinating...The passages in Scratched that deal with writer's block will have the effect of quicksand on anyone who's struggled to express herself on paper. You sink under, horrified and enthralled... Scratched proceeds on strong sentences, sleek with a hard, dark lacquer...There is a sadomasochism, then, to the reading and writing of [it], and Tallent is never so alluring as when she's parsing her own prison. -- The New Yorker.com, Page-Turner Ms. Tallent's exploration of perfectionism is an exploration of living as a writer and living as a woman...But as she turns perfectionism over, studying its facets, its idiosyncrasies, it becomes clear that this disorder stems from something more universal than writing or womanhood: the loss of love...Her writing is beautiful and precise, full of flashing insights and bracing honesty. -- Elizabeth Winkler, Wall Street Journal Scratched is a brave and complex memoir...Tallent brings an intellectual rigor to her memoir that recalls Kathryn Harrison and Dani Shapiro. She is capable of beautiful precision...The lesson, which also applies to this book, is that there's beauty and value in imperfection, too. -- Heller McAlpin, Washington Post Chaotic, tumbling, and beautiful prose. . . . Scratched is a pure and consuming pleasure. Its messiness feels both defiant and intentional, a middle finger raised to perfectionism. . . . Tallent's juxtaposition of style and structure with subject matter is her memoir's big victory. It's also refreshing to read...Reading it reminded me how exhilarating disorderly writing can be... Scratched is a performance of, and appeal for, urgency. It's a call I hope other writers will be able to heed. -- Lily Meyer, NPR.org A profound new memoir, Tallent takes readers deep into her own internal high-pressure chambers of self-loathing and not-enough-ness -- feelings that can goad creativity, but also ultimately shut it down...A tentative embrace of creating something contradictory and new is finally what this oddly enthralling memoir embodies. -- Maureen Corrigan, NPR Tallent published four lauded books in the 1980s and 1990s, but this is not a memoir about that; readers meet her again as a Stanford professor and the divorced mother of her young son, grasping for the root of her perfectionism and its stunting effects on her writing. Tallent's personal literary endeavor contains many wildly evocative passages and breathtaking sentences, making it a must-read for lovers of writers' memoirs. -- Booklist Reading Scratched gave me the feeling of standing very close to a blazing fire. It is that brilliant, that intense, and one of the finest explorations I know of what it means to be a woman and an artist. -- Sigrid Nunez, author of The Friend and Winner of the National Book Award for Fiction Tallent published four lauded books in the 1980s and 1990s, but this is not a memoir about that; readers meet her again as a Stanford professor and the divorced mother of her young son, grasping for the root of her perfectionism and its stunting effects on her writing. Tallent's personal literary endeavor contains many wildly evocative passages and breathtaking sentences, making it a must-read for lovers of writers' memoirs. --Booklist Reading Scratched gave me the feeling of standing very close to a blazing fire. It is that brilliant, that intense, and one of the finest explorations I know of what it means to be a woman and an artist. --Sigrid Nunez, author of The Friend and Winner of the National Book Award for Fiction Ms. Tallent's exploration of perfectionism is an exploration of living as a writer and living as a woman...But as she turns perfectionism over, studying its facets, its idiosyncrasies, it becomes clear that this disorder stems from something more universal than writing or womanhood: the loss of love...Her writing is beautiful and precise, full of flashing insights and bracing honesty. --Elizabeth Winkler, Wall Street Journal Fascinating...The passages in Scratched that deal with writer's block will have the effect of quicksand on anyone who's struggled to express herself on paper. You sink under, horrified and enthralled... Scratched proceeds on strong sentences, sleek with a hard, dark lacquer...There is a sadomasochism, then, to the reading and writing of [it], and Tallent is never so alluring as when she's parsing her own prison. --The New Yorker.com, Page-Turner Chaotic, tumbling, and beautiful prose. . . . Scratched is a pure and consuming pleasure. Its messiness feels both defiant and intentional, a middle finger raised to perfectionism. . . . Tallent's juxtaposition of style and structure with subject matter is her memoir's big victory. It's also refreshing to read...Reading it reminded me how exhilarating disorderly writing can be... Scratched is a performance of, and appeal for, urgency. It's a call I hope other writers will be able to heed. --Lily Meyer, NPR.org A singular and haunting memoir...The book approaches the mysteries, gaps and obstacles in Tallent's own story with the same psychological precision and elliptical motivation she applies to her fictional characters...Elizabeth Tallent's gift has never been in doubt...She has written a subtle and idiosyncratic account that tries to elucidate her decades-long writer's block even as she recognizes that--as with so much in anyone's life--she cannot fully grasp it. I'm not sure I've ever read a memoir quite like this, one that spills its many dark secrets with so little self-pity, so much acuity and such a deliberate lack of authorial certitude. --Daphne Merkin, New York Times Book Review A profound new memoir, Tallent takes readers deep into her own internal high-pressure chambers of self-loathing and not-enough-ness -- feelings that can goad creativity, but also ultimately shut it down...A tentative embrace of creating something contradictory and new is finally what this oddly enthralling memoir embodies. --Maureen Corrigan, NPR [Scratched is] a harrowing story of overcoming perfectionism, leavened by [Tallent's] dry wit and precise, poetic use of language. . . . This book is a record of Tallent's struggle to show her scratches and to believe, as her young son tells her one day after spilling a glass of milk, 'Everybody makes mistakes.' --Associated Press Scratched is a brave and complex memoir...Tallent brings an intellectual rigor to her memoir that recalls Kathryn Harrison and Dani Shapiro. She is capable of beautiful precision...The lesson, which also applies to this book, is that there's beauty and value in imperfection, too. --Heller McAlpin, Washington Post Honest and moving. --Psychology Today Author InformationElizabeth Tallent, author of a novel and four story collections, has appeared in The Threepenny Review, The Paris Review, The New Yorker, Tin House, and ZYZZYVA as well as in the Best American Short Stories, Best American Essays, O. Henry Prize, and Pushcart Prize award anthologies. She teaches in Stanford's Creative Writing Program and lives with her wife, an antiques dealer, on the Mendocino Coast. 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