| On the Outskirts of Normal: Forging a Family against the Grain |  | Author: Debra Monroe Publisher: Southern Methodist University Press Category: Book
List Price: $22.50 Buy New: $14.46 as of 9/6/2010 23:55 MDT details You Save: $8.04 (36%)
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Seller: ---superbookdeals Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 14,291
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 248 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.1 x 1
ISBN: 0870745603 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780870745607 ASIN: 0870745603
Publication Date: May 7, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Mired in debt and on the run from a series of broken homes, about-to-be-divorced Debra Monroe pulls up in front of a tumbledown cabin outside a small Texas town. Its isolation—miles from her teaching job in a neighboring city—feels right. She buys the house and ultimately doubles its size as she waits for the call from the adoption agency to tell her she’s going to be a mom. Now in her forties, she is swept into the strange new world of single motherhood, complicated by the fact that she’s white and her daughter is black. As Monroe learns to deal with her daughter’s hair and to re-enter the dating scene, all the while coping with her own and her daughter’s major illnesses, they live under the magnified scrutiny of the small, conservative town. Confronting her past in order to make a better life for her daughter, Monroe rebuilds not only a half-ruined cabin in the woods but her sense of what it is that makes a sustainable family.
“Having driven across the country to see her brand-new adopted granddaughter, Debra Monroe’s mother says the first thing that comes into her head: ‘I knew she’d be black, but not this black.’ Monroe simply says, ‘Mom, there’s a blank in the baby book called Grandma’s First Words.’ The sly, dry humor of this, the offering of the second chance, the reminder that everything, even the mistakes, will be written down—tells you most of what you need to know about Monroe’s approach to life, and to memoir. Her generosity of spirit never fails her.”—Marion Winik, author of First Comes Love
“Monroe’s memoir forges a remarkable canniness about motherhood and its twin perils, grief and love.”—Karen Brennan, author of Being with Rachel (20100601)
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
An important, surprising book May 27, 2010 Luke Ripley (Wisconsin) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I've been a fan of Debra Monroe's fiction since I read the first story in her first story collection, The Source of Trouble. So I was glad when I stumbled upon an advance copy of her new memoir, On the Outskirts of Normal. I began reading and couldn't stop. The memoir has an exciting "catch" -- a single white woman adopts a black child -- a hook worthy of the talk show circuit and major magazine reviews (Vanity Fair, for example, listed the memoir as Required Reading). But what's most remarkable is how unremarkable race comes to be. The author doesn't see herself as an activist or a crusader; she simply wants to be a mother, as soon as she can. Her daughter's race isn't something she cares about, though she can't help noticing when other people remark or stare or ask oddly inappropriate questions. Nor is Monroe defiant about her need for love and hope for a partner. In later chapters, after four years of single-motherhood, she begins dating again and must navigate the contradictory pulls of desire and responsibility. By the end, Monroe has endured potentially life-threatening illness, the loss of her mother, unwanted advances, loneliness and doubt, and has come through it all to form a family she trusts and believes in. The story's told in language that's both lyrical and spare, with a wisdom that only comes from a hard life and a long-lived writing career. Monroe's had both, and I hope this isn't her last memoir.
On the Outskirts....a MUST read June 7, 2010 C. Sisto (Rio Grande Valley, TX) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I've been a fan of Debra Monroe's fiction for years and eagerly anticipated the release of her memoir. I have not been disappointed in the least. This book is beautifully written. I love the cyclical style of how the events unfold. It's both a sad and yet positive tale of the examined life. It's a "must read" for both mothers and daughters, as well as for anyone who has made mistakes early in life, and learned to land on their feet.
Beautiful and moving and real June 11, 2010 Richard A. Cooper 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Yes, an excellent memoir, by Debra Monroe! I've read this book, ON THE OUTSKIRTS OF NORMAL, in two sittings. (Need to breathe now...) And I'm thinking about several things she's done, i.e., purpose, structure, interpretation, etc., but really, she's created something beautiful and moving.
On the Outskirts of Normal: Forging a Family against the Grain
Like a Novel in Short Stories June 21, 2010 David Meischen (Austin, TX) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Four days ago, I heard Debra Monroe read from her new memoir. This afternoon, I finished reading it. A beautifully written memoir. Each chapter reads like a self-contained short story. Each "story" echoes themes and images from the preceding stories. Each one extends the arc of a story about families, about parents, about how we learn and what we learn about love, about how we pass along what we've learned to our children. It's a book to be read and re-read and then read again.
On the Outskirts of Normal, In the Heart of Extraordinary May 24, 2010 A. Scott (Indianapolis, IN) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I have admired Debra Monroe's fiction for years, so I bought this memoir with interest. It's a compelling read -- I stayed up until dawn to finish it -- and certain chapters, especially "The Time to Be Lovely is Always," should be required reading for anyone interested in writing a memoir or personal essay. She is a master prose-maker who walks the tightrope between lyricism and economy.
Monroe's fiction has often seemed autobiographical, and if you're a close reader, you might spot a few details in this memoir and reflect back on some of the stories in "The Source of Trouble" or "A Wild, Cold State," but if you haven't read either of those books, I recommend that you buy all three at once, right now. You won't regret it.
Here are a few recent reviews of this book (copied from the author's website):
"REQUIRED READING! Independent presses burn white-hot this month. In a setting were working mothers are rare, single mom and novelist Debra Monroe's adoption of a black baby puts her On the Outskirts of Normal."
--Vanity Fair magazine, June 2010
"Infused with humor and compassion. The ways in which Monroe circumnavigates these challenges are by turns hilarious and heartbreaking. What shines throughout the book is Monroe's love for the little girl who transformed her life."
--Chitra Dvakaruni, Houston Chronicle
"Monroe asks a lot of her readers -- intelligence, openness -- and in return she delivers compassion, keen wit, and acute honesty. She never lets us blink: we stare while she figures out how to handle her daughter's hair; while she suffers at the hands of a doctor; and while her neighbor makes a bad judgment call, leaving her yard and house exposed to passing cars and random predators. She shares her fear with us, and, in doing so, reveals her own bravery."
--Andi Diehn, Foreward, Summer 2010
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
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