The Hope in Leaving: A Memoir

Author:   Barbara Williams
Publisher:   Seven Stories Press,U.S.
ISBN:  

9781609806729


Pages:   242
Publication Date:   29 March 2016
Format:   Hardback
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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The Hope in Leaving: A Memoir


Overview

Handsome Jack is a logger, nomad,and born dreamer. His young wife, Simone,has too many kids and never enough moneyto support or protect them. The family keepson the move, shedding a grand total of twenty-seven homes. Their first child, Randy, issensitive and brilliant and bold, protector ofhis younger siblings, the fearless star of theirchildhood adventures and misadventures-until something snaps inside him. The second child who comes a year after him, ournarrator Barbara, is the lucky one, who candream of getting out. Every time the familyrelocates, she feels ""the hope in leaving anddoing better next time."" Poverty, mental illness, sexual abuse,and injustice pursue them wherever they go.They live small-town life hard and suffer,most of all Randy. The great surprise ofTheHope in Leavingisn't that these characters descend increasingly into isolation and strife,but that despite this they remain a family,that there is always the spark of wit in theirbanter, and a kind of closeness no matterwhat happens, even a sense of normalcy.Gradually, the reader comes to understandwhyThe Hope in Leavingis a book that had to bewritten. In it, Williams proves beyond doubtthat there is one thing that can survive theworst of life and even death itself- love without judgment.

Full Product Details

Author:   Barbara Williams
Publisher:   Seven Stories Press,U.S.
Imprint:   Seven Stories Press,U.S.
Dimensions:   Width: 13.30cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 21.00cm
Weight:   0.332kg
ISBN:  

9781609806729


ISBN 10:   1609806727
Pages:   242
Publication Date:   29 March 2016
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
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

Barbara Williams is the daughter of wanderlust. She grew up in logging camps, skid roads, and temporary homes on Vancouver Island and mainland British Columbia. Her father was Handsome Jack, the man who danced on tree-tops and was always saying goodbye. Indeed this is a book of leavings and disappearances where home is little more than a random path within the epic immensity and sorrow of the Pacific Northwest. In exquisite prose, always wary of self-pity, she tells the story of abrotherhood of semi-nomadic forest workers, their dangerous jobs and shattered families. The genre is deceptive: imagine a coming of age story but written by JohnSteinbeck. --Mike Davis Barbara Williams has written a breathtaking, ruthlessly poetic coming of stage; a memoirthat reads more like a hardscrabble book of common prayer. Hope In Leaving is a born writer's pure and savage plainsong, a ghost dance summoning family, hope, endurance, and the transcendence of love. --Bruce Wagner If you appreciate Mary Karr and Jeannette Walls, you'll want to read Williams's eloquent memoir of growing up in and out of the harsh lumber camps of British Columbia. In an honest, compelling voice devoid of self-pity, she tells of finding solace in nature's beauty, of grasping for shards of love. Through this painful, riveting journey, the bright, curious child manages to grow into a resilient, hopeful artist. Jane Fonda


Searingly honest, the book is a testimony to one woman's resilience and ability to love in the face of unimaginable hardship. An unsentimentally candid memoir of hope and determination. Kirkus Reviews Authentic. Human. Unselfconscious. Beautifully crafted. The Hope in Leaving is a jewel of a book. Helen Hunt Barbara Williams is the daughter of wanderlust. She grew up in logging camps, skid roads, and temporary homes on Vancouver Island and mainland British Columbia. Her father was Handsome Jack, the man who danced on tree-tops and was always saying goodbye. Indeed this is a book of leavings and disappearances where home is little more than a random path within the epic immensity and sorrow of the Pacific Northwest. In exquisite prose, always wary of self-pity, she tells the story of abrotherhood of semi-nomadic forest workers, their dangerous jobs and shattered families. The genre is deceptive: imagine a 'coming of age story' but written by John Steinbeck. Mike Davis Barbara Williams has written a breathtaking, ruthlessly poetic coming of stage; a memoirthat reads more like a hardscrabble book of common prayer. Hope In Leaving is a born writer's pure and savage plainsong, a ghost dance summoning family, hope, endurance, and the transcendence of love. Bruce Wagner If you appreciate Mary Karr and Jeannette Walls, you'll want to read Williams's eloquent memoir of growing up in and out of the harsh lumber camps of British Columbia. In an honest, compelling voice devoid of self-pity, she tells of finding solace in nature's beauty, of grasping for shards of love. Through this painful, riveting journey, the bright, curious child manages to grow into a resilient, hopeful artist. Jane Fonda


Authentic. Human. Unselfconscious. Beautifully crafted. The Hope in Leaving is a jewel of a book. Helen Hunt Barbara Williams is the daughter of wanderlust. She grew up in logging camps, skid roads, and temporary homes on Vancouver Island and mainland British Columbia. Her father was Handsome Jack, the man who danced on tree-tops and was always saying goodbye. Indeed this is a book of leavings and disappearances where home is little more than a random path within the epic immensity and sorrow of the Pacific Northwest. In exquisite prose, always wary of self-pity, she tells the story of abrotherhood of semi-nomadic forest workers, their dangerous jobs and shattered families. The genre is deceptive: imagine a coming of age story but written by JohnSteinbeck. --Mike Davis Barbara Williams has written a breathtaking, ruthlessly poetic coming of stage; a memoirthat reads more like a hardscrabble book of common prayer. Hope In Leaving is a born writer's pure and savage plainsong, a ghost dance summoning family, hope, endurance, and the transcendence of love. --Bruce Wagner If you appreciate Mary Karr and Jeannette Walls, you'll want to read Williams's eloquent memoir of growing up in and out of the harsh lumber camps of British Columbia. In an honest, compelling voice devoid of self-pity, she tells of finding solace in nature's beauty, of grasping for shards of love. Through this painful, riveting journey, the bright, curious child manages to grow into a resilient, hopeful artist. Jane Fonda


Authentic. Human. Unselfconscious. Beautifully crafted. The Hope in Leaving is a jewel of a book. Helen Hunt Barbara Williams is the daughter of wanderlust. She grew up in logging camps, skid roads, and temporary homes on Vancouver Island and mainland British Columbia. Her father was Handsome Jack, the man who danced on tree-tops and was always saying goodbye. Indeed this is a book of leavings and disappearances where home is little more than a random path within the epic immensity and sorrow of the Pacific Northwest. In exquisite prose, always wary of self-pity, she tells the story of abrotherhood of semi-nomadic forest workers, their dangerous jobs and shattered families. The genre is deceptive: imagine a 'coming of age story' but written by John Steinbeck. Mike Davis Barbara Williams has written a breathtaking, ruthlessly poetic coming of stage; a memoirthat reads more like a hardscrabble book of common prayer. Hope In Leaving is a born writer's pure and savage plainsong, a ghost dance summoning family, hope, endurance, and the transcendence of love. Bruce Wagner If you appreciate Mary Karr and Jeannette Walls, you'll want to read Williams's eloquent memoir of growing up in and out of the harsh lumber camps of British Columbia. In an honest, compelling voice devoid of self-pity, she tells of finding solace in nature's beauty, of grasping for shards of love. Through this painful, riveting journey, the bright, curious child manages to grow into a resilient, hopeful artist. Jane Fonda


Author Information

BARBARA WILLIAMS is a Canadian musician and actress. Early in her career, Williams starred in the films Thief of Hearts and City of Hope. She won a Canadian Emmy Award for Best Actress for the telepic Mother Trucker. She was a member of the Resident Theatre Company in Vancouver, and among her more than thirty stage roles, she portrayed Amelia Earhart in the musical Amelia at Canada's National Arts Center, Joan Baez at the Met Theatre in Los Angeles, and Lady Macbeth in La Jolla, California, under Tony Award winner Des McAnuff's direction. As a musician she has performed in the United States and Canada, often in concerts devoted to peace, workers' rights, and the environment. The Hope in Leaving is her first book. She lives and works in Los Angeles with her husband, Tom Hayden, and her son, Liam.

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