Transplant: A Memoir

Author:   Bernardine Watson
Publisher:   Washington Writers' Publishing House
ISBN:  

9781941551363


Pages:   340
Publication Date:   03 October 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Transplant: A Memoir


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Overview

Transplant: A Memoir, is a page-turning, personal journey into one Black woman's battle with kidney disease and the American medical system. Bernardine Watson's book is at once a truth-telling and an affirmation of the life force propelling us all toward love and hope. A vibrant, powerful portrait of what it means to be Black, female, and confronting a deadly disease in today's America. Winner of the first annual Washington Writers' Publishing House Creative Nonfiction Award, 2023. Named one of the '5 over 50' debuts in 2023 by Poets & Writers magazine.

Full Product Details

Author:   Bernardine Watson
Publisher:   Washington Writers' Publishing House
Imprint:   Washington Writers' Publishing House
Dimensions:   Width: 13.50cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 21.50cm
Weight:   0.417kg
ISBN:  

9781941551363


ISBN 10:   194155136
Pages:   340
Publication Date:   03 October 2023
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

"""We think of a transplant as a surgical procedure, but Bernardine Watson's memoir makes it clear that it's also a journey. Transplant: A Memoir transports the reader along the path of hopes dashed, then revived, despair, courage, faith, and love. Watson's strikingly visual prose is also intimate. We're always in the same space with her, seeing, hearing and feeling exactly what she does. It's a journey toward life."" Kojo Nnamdi Host, The Politics Hour with Kojo Nnamdi WAMU-FM, National Public Radio ""Bernardine Watson has written a beautiful memoir about the struggle to maintain health while living with a potentially lethal disease. But Transplant: A Memoir is mostly a book about becoming: a woman, a mother, a member of a family she learns to love better, and a loved and treasured soul mate. Through her struggle, she becomes much more than her disease and bigger and braver than she could have imagined."" Marita Golden Author, Creative Writing Coach, Literary Consultant ""African Americans represent 13% of the US population but account for nearly 35% of people with kidney failure in the US. Bernardine Watson's account of living with a rare kidney disease depicts just how real these statics are. It is vital that patient advocacy organizations like NephCure and patients like Watson continue to raise awareness and fight for more innovation in the kidney disease space."" Kelly Helm, Executive Director of Patient Engagement at NephCure ""Bernardine Watson has delivered a brave, inspiring memoir of resilience against long odds, of her struggle to stay healthy and hopeful as she battled a rare, incurable kidney disease. In 'Transplant: A Memoir, ' Dine's spirit--and sometimes her anger--leaps off the pages, grabs you, holds you and ultimately lifts you. This is a story for all of us. Kevin Merida co-author, Supreme Discomfort: The Divided Soul of Clarence Thomas With honesty and humor, Bernardine Watson takes us on her personal journey to conquer kidney disease, a health condition disproportionately affecting Black people and other people of color in the US. 'Transplant: A Memoir, ' is also an adult love story, celebrating the power of care and kindness in building a strong relationship. Louis Massiah Documentary Filmmaker, Martin Luther King, Jr. Scholar at Massachusetts Institute of Technology"


"""We think of a transplant as a surgical procedure, but Bernardine Watson's memoir makes it clear that it's also a journey. Transplant: A Memoir transports the reader along the path of hopes dashed, then revived, despair, courage, faith, and love. Watson's strikingly visual prose is also intimate. We're always in the same space with her, seeing, hearing, and feeling exactly what she does. It's a journey toward life."" Kojo Nnamdi Host, The Politics Hour with Kojo Nnamdi WAMU-FM, National Public Radio ""Bernardine Watson has written a beautiful memoir about the struggle to maintain health while living with a potentially lethal disease. But Transplant: A Memoir is mostly a book about becoming: a woman, a mother, a member of a family she learns to love better, and a loved and treasured soul mate. Through her struggle, she becomes much more than her disease and bigger and braver than she could have imagined."" Marita Golden Author, Creative Writing Coach, Literary Consultant ""African Americans represent 13% of the US population but account for nearly 35% of people with kidney failure in the US. Bernardine Watson's account of living with a rare kidney disease depicts just how real these statistics are. It is vital that patient advocacy organizations like NephCure and patients like Watson continue to raise awareness and fight for more innovation in the kidney disease space."" Kelly Helm, Executive Director of Patient Engagement at NephCure ""Bernardine Watson has delivered a brave, inspiring memoir of resilience against long odds, of her struggle to stay healthy and hopeful as she battled a rare, incurable kidney disease. In Transplant: A Memoir, Dine's spirit--and sometimes her anger--leaps off the pages, grabs you, holds you, and ultimately, lifts you. This is a story for all of us. Kevin Merida co-author, Supreme Discomfort: The Divided Soul of Clarence Thomas With honesty and humor, Bernardine Watson takes us on her personal journey to conquer kidney disease, a health condition disproportionately affecting Black people and other people of color in the US. Transplant: A Memoir is also an adult love story, celebrating the power of care and kindness in building a strong relationship. Louis Massiah Documentary Filmmaker, Martin Luther King, Jr. Scholar at Massachusetts Institute of Technology"


Author Information

Bernardine (Dine) Watson is a nonfiction writer and poet, originally from Philadelphia, but who now lives in Washington, DC. She has written on social policy issues for numerous major foundations, nonprofit organizations, and for The Washington Post Health and Science section and She the People blog. Her poetry has been published in numerous journals and anthologies, including Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Rising Voices/ University Professors Press, Sanctuary/ Darkhouse Books, and The Great World of Days/ Day Eight Arts. Dine is a member of the 2015 class of the DC Commission on Arts and Humanities Poet in Progress Program and was selected to participate in the 2017 and 2018 classes of the Hurston Wright Foundation's Summer Writers' Workshop for Poetry. She is a member of Day Eight Art's Board of Directors. More on her website: www.bernardinewatson.com

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