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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Aaron Raz Link , Hilda RazPublisher: University of Nebraska Press Imprint: University of Nebraska Press Edition: New Edition Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.472kg ISBN: 9781496227843ISBN 10: 1496227840 Pages: 324 Publication Date: 01 April 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews[Link and Raz] continue to surprise and challenge us as they pull from their knowledge of biology and feminism, and fairy tales and psychiatry, to wrestle with understanding Link's transsexuality. The memoir welcomes readers into a study of the struggles and complexity of relationships in any family. --Bloomsbury Review-- Bloomsbury Review Aaron Raz Link's story is a vital contribution to the oeuvre of transgender literature. . . . It is careful and tender while simultaneously confrontational and challenging. --Julie R. Enszer, Lambda Book Report --Julie R. Enszer Lambda Book Report (10/17/2007 12:00:00 AM) The deepest pleasure of memoir is that it can teach us to see truths through eyes other than our own, and What Becomes You accomplishes exactly that. --Gayle Salamon, Great Plains Quarterly --Gayle Salamon Great Plains Quarterly What Becomes You is the best kind of book. And not just because it's funny and poetic, honest, personal, carefully researched and detailed, and hugely informative on the subjects of gender and transsexualism. It's the best kind of book because it challenges readers to grow in the most critical ways. . . . [It] opens the reader to the present moment, to considering and investigating what 'is' instead of what the reader thinks should be. It makes us think before responding in habitual ways to those who are different from us. And in this world, I can't think of anything that's much more important than that right now.--Ellen Santasiero, The Source (Bend, OR)--Ellen Santasiero The Source (Bend, OR) (5/3/2007 12:00:00 AM) What Becomes You is a radically strange, deeply moving, unique book, a mother and child story like none you've ever read. There is nothing in our literature remotely like this story of personal transformation, a non-traditional story of coming of age and letting go told in a non-traditional way that challenges all of your assumptions about gender, family, stability, and social harmony. You will love this book, these people, and their candid, tough-minded bond. --Floyd Skloot, author of In the Shadow of Memory and A World of Light--Floyd Skloot (6/9/2006 12:00:00 AM) What Becomes You is a tranny memoir/rant/documentary that reads like a whirlwind of James Joyce, William S. Burroughs, and Sarah Schulman, delivering a dizzying tour of gender worlds and netherworlds from a multiplicity of viewpoints. --Kate Bornstein, author of Hello, Cruel World: 101 Alternatives to Suicide for Teens, Freaks, and Other Outlaws--Kate Bornstein (7/25/2006 12:00:00 AM) What Becomes You is the best memoir I've read in a decade. It is close to the bone, poetic without an ounce of sentimentality, full of humor and humanity, and excruciating in its self-examination. . . . This book is what happens when two extraordinary writers share intimate tales of self-discovery in prose that's both exquisite and accessible. --Glenn Scofield Williams, JustOut-- JustOut A blend of essay, memoir and intergenerational dialogue, this title is stranger--and smarter--than the average transsexual memoir. . . . [An] oddly moving, more illuminating and memorable than a straightforward memoir could have been. --Publishers Weekly Web-Exclusive-- Publishers Weekly Web Exclusive Raz manages to explore the multiplicity of truths and fictions that make up Link's personal embodiment. . . . What Becomes You illuminates the strained relationship between a mother and her son. --Jacob Anderson-Minshall, Women's Review of Books--Jacob Anderson-Minshall Women's Review of Books (7/16/2007 12:00:00 AM) Scientist Link begins his fascinating account of gender reassignment by explaining scientific classification. . . . Raz writes of her child with rare and moving candor. . . . Mother and son's poignant account becomes one of steadfast maternal love in the midst of changes only partly physical. Both knowingly return, always, to the terrain of the heart. --Booklist-- Booklist This deeply personal collaborative memoir details the multiple layers of the journey Child and Mom take on the road to Sarah becoming Aaron. This book can't help but challenge the readers to rethink what they know about gender, sex, family relationships, and themselves. A compelling narrative, this is the best book I've read this year. --OutSmart-- OutSmart Throughout, [Link and Raz] place their story in a larger context; the prose, graceful and intelligent, mirrors the breadth of their thought and the depth of their emotion. --Jesse Hicks, Mid-American Review-- Mid-American Review (7/3/2007 12:00:00 AM) “The deepest pleasure of memoir is that it can teach us to see truths through eyes other than our own, and What Becomes You accomplishes exactly that.”—Gayle Salamon, Great Plains Quarterly “Aaron Raz Link’s story is a vital contribution to the oeuvre of transgender literature. . . . It is careful and tender while simultaneously confrontational and challenging.”—Julie R. Enszer, Lambda Book Report “This deeply personal collaborative memoir details the multiple layers of the journey Child and Mom take on the road to Sarah becoming Aaron. This book can’t help but challenge readers to rethink what they know about gender, sex, family relationships, and themselves. A compelling narrative, this is the best book I’ve read this year.”—OutSmart “What Becomes You is the best memoir I’ve read in a decade. It is close to the bone, poetic without an ounce of sentimentality, full of humor and humanity, and excruciating in its self-examination. . . . This book is what happens when two extraordinary writers share intimate tales of self-discovery in prose that’s both exquisite and accessible.”—Glenn Scofield Williams, JustOut “Scientist Link begins his fascinating account of gender reassignment by explaining scientific classification. . . . Raz writes of her child with rare and moving candor. . . . Mother and son’s poignant account becomes one of steadfast maternal love in the midst of changes only partly physical. Both knowingly return, always, to the terrain of the heart.”—Booklist “A blend of essay, memoir and intergenerational dialogue, this title is stranger—and smarter—than the average transsexual memoir. . . . [An] oddly moving, more illuminating and memorable than a straightforward memoir could have been.”—Publishers Weekly Web-Exclusive “[Link and Raz] continue to surprise and challenge us as they pull from their knowledge of biology and feminism, and fairy tales and psychiatry, to wrestle with understanding Link’s transsexuality. The memoir welcomes readers into a study of the struggles and complexity of relationships in any family.”—Bloomsbury Review ""What Becomes You is the best kind of book. And not just because it’s funny and poetic, honest, personal, carefully researched and detailed, and hugely informative on the subjects of gender and transsexualism. It’s the best kind of book because it challenges readers to grow in the most critical ways. . . . [It] opens the reader to the present moment, to considering and investigating what 'is' instead of what the reader thinks should be. It makes us think before responding in habitual ways to those who are different from us. And in this world, I can’t think of anything that’s much more important than that right now.""—Ellen Santasiero, The Source (Bend, OR) “Throughout, [Link and Raz] place their story in a larger context; the prose, graceful and intelligent, mirrors the breadth of their thought and the depth of their emotion.”—Jesse Hicks, Mid-American Review “What Becomes You is a tranny memoir/rant/documentary that reads like a whirlwind of James Joyce, William S. Burroughs, and Sarah Schulman, delivering a dizzying tour of gender worlds and netherworlds from a multiplicity of viewpoints.”—Kate Bornstein, author of Hello, Cruel World: 101 Alternatives to Suicide for Teens, Freaks, and Other Outlaws “What Becomes You is a radically strange, deeply moving, unique book, a mother and child story like none you’ve ever read. There is nothing in our literature remotely like this story of personal transformation, a non-traditional story of coming of age and letting go told in a non-traditional way that challenges all of your assumptions about gender, family, stability, and social harmony. You will love this book, these people, and their candid, tough-minded bond.”—Floyd Skloot, author of In the Shadow of Memory and A World of Light “Raz manages to explore the multiplicity of truths and fictions that make up Link’s personal embodiment. . . . What Becomes You illuminates the strained relationship between a mother and her son.”—Jacob Anderson-Minshall, Women’s Review of Books Throughout, [Link and Raz] place their story in a larger context; the prose, graceful and intelligent, mirrors the breadth of their thought and the depth of their emotion. --Jesse Hicks, Mid-American Review-- Mid-American Review (7/3/2007 12:00:00 AM) This deeply personal collaborative memoir details the multiple layers of the journey Child and Mom take on the road to Sarah becoming Aaron. This book can't help but challenge the readers to rethink what they know about gender, sex, family relationships, and themselves. A compelling narrative, this is the best book I've read this year. --OutSmart-- OutSmart Scientist Link begins his fascinating account of gender reassignment by explaining scientific classification. . . . Raz writes of her child with rare and moving candor. . . . Mother and son's poignant account becomes one of steadfast maternal love in the midst of changes only partly physical. Both knowingly return, always, to the terrain of the heart. --Booklist-- Booklist Raz manages to explore the multiplicity of truths and fictions that make up Link's personal embodiment. . . . What Becomes You illuminates the strained relationship between a mother and her son. --Jacob Anderson-Minshall, Women's Review of Books--Jacob Anderson-Minshall Women's Review of Books (7/16/2007 12:00:00 AM) A blend of essay, memoir and intergenerational dialogue, this title is stranger--and smarter--than the average transsexual memoir. . . . [An] oddly moving, more illuminating and memorable than a straightforward memoir could have been. --Publishers Weekly Web-Exclusive-- Publishers Weekly Web Exclusive What Becomes You is the best memoir I've read in a decade. It is close to the bone, poetic without an ounce of sentimentality, full of humor and humanity, and excruciating in its self-examination. . . . This book is what happens when two extraordinary writers share intimate tales of self-discovery in prose that's both exquisite and accessible. --Glenn Scofield Williams, JustOut-- JustOut What Becomes You is a tranny memoir/rant/documentary that reads like a whirlwind of James Joyce, William S. Burroughs, and Sarah Schulman, delivering a dizzying tour of gender worlds and netherworlds from a multiplicity of viewpoints. --Kate Bornstein, author of Hello, Cruel World: 101 Alternatives to Suicide for Teens, Freaks, and Other Outlaws--Kate Bornstein (7/25/2006 12:00:00 AM) What Becomes You is a radically strange, deeply moving, unique book, a mother and child story like none you've ever read. There is nothing in our literature remotely like this story of personal transformation, a non-traditional story of coming of age and letting go told in a non-traditional way that challenges all of your assumptions about gender, family, stability, and social harmony. You will love this book, these people, and their candid, tough-minded bond. --Floyd Skloot, author of In the Shadow of Memory and A World of Light--Floyd Skloot (6/9/2006 12:00:00 AM) What Becomes You is the best kind of book. And not just because it's funny and poetic, honest, personal, carefully researched and detailed, and hugely informative on the subjects of gender and transsexualism. It's the best kind of book because it challenges readers to grow in the most critical ways. . . . [It] opens the reader to the present moment, to considering and investigating what 'is' instead of what the reader thinks should be. It makes us think before responding in habitual ways to those who are different from us. And in this world, I can't think of anything that's much more important than that right now.--Ellen Santasiero, The Source (Bend, OR)--Ellen Santasiero The Source (Bend, OR) (5/3/2007 12:00:00 AM) The deepest pleasure of memoir is that it can teach us to see truths through eyes other than our own, and What Becomes You accomplishes exactly that. --Gayle Salamon, Great Plains Quarterly --Gayle Salamon Great Plains Quarterly Aaron Raz Link's story is a vital contribution to the oeuvre of transgender literature. . . . It is careful and tender while simultaneously confrontational and challenging. --Julie R. Enszer, Lambda Book Report --Julie R. Enszer Lambda Book Report (10/17/2007 12:00:00 AM) [Link and Raz] continue to surprise and challenge us as they pull from their knowledge of biology and feminism, and fairy tales and psychiatry, to wrestle with understanding Link's transsexuality. The memoir welcomes readers into a study of the struggles and complexity of relationships in any family. --Bloomsbury Review-- Bloomsbury Review The deepest pleasure of memoir is that it can teach us to see truths through eyes other than our own, and What Becomes You accomplishes exactly that.--Gayle Salamon, Great Plains Quarterly--Gayle Salamon Throughout, [Link and Raz] place their story in a larger context; the prose, graceful and intelligent, mirrors the breadth of their thought and the depth of their emotion. --Jesse Hicks, Mid-American Review-- Mid-American Review (7/3/2007 12:00:00 AM) This deeply personal collaborative memoir details the multiple layers of the journey Child and Mom take on the road to Sarah becoming Aaron. This book can't help but challenge the readers to rethink what they know about gender, sex, family relationships, and themselves. A compelling narrative, this is the best book I've read this year. --OutSmart-- OutSmart Scientist Link begins his fascinating account of gender reassignment by explaining scientific classification. . . . Raz writes of her child with rare and moving candor. . . . Mother and son's poignant account becomes one of steadfast maternal love in the midst of changes only partly physical. Both knowingly return, always, to the terrain of the heart. --Booklist-- Booklist Raz manages to explore the multiplicity of truths and fictions that make up Link's personal embodiment. . . . What Becomes You illuminates the strained relationship between a mother and her son. --Jacob Anderson-Minshall, Women's Review of Books--Jacob Anderson-Minshall Women's Review of Books (7/16/2007 12:00:00 AM) Link tells the story with sharp emotion . . . [and] often startles with his acute observations. Raz writes in a clearer narrative style and her careful introspection adds to this already nuanced story. . . . [Link and Raz] continue to surprise and challenge us as they pull from their knowledge of biology and feminism, and fairy tales and psychiatry, to wrestle with understanding Link's transsexuality. The memoir welcomes readers into a study of the struggles and complexity of relationships in any family. --Bloomsbury Review-- Bloomsbury Review Aaron Raz Link's story is a vital contribution to the oeuvre of transgender literature. . . . [H]is writing is potent and well crafted. . . . Hilda Raz's story is similarly an important part of the transgender oeuvre. . . . Throughout the book, she strikes an emotive tone that is both resonant and authentic. . . . What Becomes You is a superb memoir. As finely wrought as Minnie Bruce Pratt's S/he, it is careful and tender while simultaneously confrontational and challenging. --Julie R. Enszer, Lambda Book Report--Julie R. Enszer Lambda Book Report (10/17/2007 12:00:00 AM) A blend of essay, memoir and intergenerational dialogue, this title is stranger--and smarter--than the average transsexual memoir. . . . [An] oddly moving, more illuminating and memorable than a straightforward memoir could have been. --Publishers Weekly Web-Exclusive-- Publishers Weekly Web Exclusive What Becomes You is the best memoir I've read in a decade. It is close to the bone, poetic without an ounce of sentimentality, full of humor and humanity, and excruciating in its self-examination. . . . This book is what happens when two extraordinary writers share intimate tales of self-discovery in prose that's both exquisite and accessible. --Glenn Scofield Williams, JustOut-- JustOut What Becomes You is a tranny memoir/rant/documentary that reads like a whirlwind of James Joyce, William S. Burroughs, and Sarah Schulman, delivering a dizzying tour of gender worlds and netherworlds from a multiplicity of viewpoints. --Kate Bornstein, author of Hello, Cruel World: 101 Alternatives to Suicide for Teens, Freaks, and Other Outlaws--Kate Bornstein (7/25/2006 12:00:00 AM) What Becomes You is a radically strange, deeply moving, unique book, a mother and child story like none you've ever read. There is nothing in our literature remotely like this story of personal transformation, a non-traditional story of coming of age and letting go told in a non-traditional way that challenges all of your assumptions about gender, family, stability, and social harmony. You will love this book, these people, and their candid, tough-minded bond. --Floyd Skloot, author of In the Shadow of Memory and A World of Light--Floyd Skloot (6/9/2006 12:00:00 AM) What Becomes You is the best kind of book. And not just because it's funny and poetic, honest, personal, carefully researched and detailed, and hugely informative on the subjects of gender and transsexualism. It's the best kind of book because it challenges readers to grow in the most critical ways. . . . [It] opens the reader to the present moment, to considering and investigating what 'is' instead of what the reader thinks should be. It makes us think before responding in habitual ways to those who are different from us. And in this world, I can't think of anything that's much more important than that right now.--Ellen Santasiero, The Source (Bend, OR)--Ellen Santasiero The Source (Bend, OR) (5/3/2007 12:00:00 AM) Author InformationAaron Raz Link has been a writing professor, a science educator for major museums, and a curriculum developer and lead instructor for a National Institutes of Health initiative program supporting diversity in science and medicine. He has also been a day laborer, a puppeteer, and the artistic director of Gorilla Theater, a company of performers from the streets. Hilda Raz is the author or editor of fourteen books, including her most recent, Letter from a Place I’ve Never Been: New and Collected Poems, 1986–2020 (Nebraska, 2021). She is the poetry editor for the University of New Mexico Press, ABQ (in)Print, and Bosque Press. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |