A House of My Own : Stories from My Life
A House of My Own : Stories from My Life
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Author(s): Cisneros, Sandra
ISBN No.: 9780345807175
Pages: 400
Year: 201609
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 22.08
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

" A House of My Own tells the story of the award-winning Mexican-American novelist, poet, short story writer and essayist''s quest for her dream house, in a book as beautifully appointed as her legendary ''purple'' home in San Antonio, with lustrous pages, color photographs and colorful chapter headings that lend it the look and feel of an objet d''art . These ''stories from my life'' assemble nonfiction drawn from three decades, touching on themes similar to those found in her fiction--identity, belonging, culture, feminism, the importance of home and kinship--each has a new introduction explaining the context and why she chose it. The book''s atypical form offers a truer portrait of Cisneros than might be found in a conventional autobiography. A literary salon steeped in storytelling and writers, it honors her process and influences and draws attention to crucial and difficult points of her development. Like a manifesto, it reasserts Cisneros''s artistic credo--living alone, charting her path, seeing writing as ''a resistance, an act against forgetting, a war against oblivion, against not counting, as women'' . Cisneros pays tribute to every friend, artist, musician and tradition that inspired her . A House of My Own reminds us of the importance of our place in the world, and of the holiness of what we find there. Cisneros is right there in the room, fiercely candid, warm and gracious, talking about everything: the best recipe for  mole , her humiliating fifth-grade report card, the men in her life, her dreams about old houses and forgotten pets--and writing, always writing.


" --Gina Webb, The Atlanta Journal Constitution "Cisneros is best known for T he House on Mango Street, about Esperanza, a Mexican-American girl who turns to writing for solace from her chaotic Chicago family life. With her newest book Cisneros fans will finally find out whether Esperanza''s story was based on the author''s real experience. In a tone that is intimate and inviting--indeed, we feel we are sitting right next to the author as she sips tea (or chugs tequila) at her home in Mexico, and recounts her adventures with a laugh and a shake of the head: Ay Dios mio . That is not to say Cisneros''s memoir is insular, accessible only to women, or writers, or those from immigrant backgrounds. Much of the book is focused on the hardships of writing, [but] it is as much an ode to pursuing one''s passion despite all odds as it is a meditation on family, friends, and finding a home. We follow her on her quest for enlightenment, for worldliness, artistic substance, and a career to sustain her. What she finds along the way is much more, including poverty, war, loss, and a depression that nearly kills her. She also happens to come across a gaggle of colorful folk that in some way reinforce her resolve .


  These are her teachers: writers, brujas, ancestors, and friends--people who inspire her faith. The book pays homage to them, the patterns cohesive in the author''s intention to assemble a picture of the mansion of the spirit . Cisneros has found a place in the world of letters, but longing for a home has kept her spirit restless . Wherever she settles, even when she settles, she is Sandra Cisneros, a wandering spirit and creator of stories. ''Stories without beginning or end, connecting everything little and large, blazing from the center of the universe into  el infinito  called the great out there.''" --Sandra Ramirez, Los Angeles Review of Books   "Rather than writing an autobiography, Cisneros has documented her life through a mélange of essay, poetry--and battle cry." --Natalie Beach, oprah.com  "Tantalizing.


In no way is this a traditional memoir with tidy numbered chapters and a smooth arc. Instead, Cisneros collects writing, lectures, newspaper articles, keynote speeches, stories repeated out loud but only now finding their way onto the page--and assembles them into one beating heart." --Maggie Galehouse, Houston Chronicle                                                                                                                                                      "Sandra Cisneros understands that a place molds you, as much as family and friends. Her new collection stitches together three decades of her unique life into a kind of rolling memoir. Not until near the end do you realize what Cisneros has done, crafting a collection that lays out memories as the mind often sees them--in pieces, in fits and starts. Each work is prefaced by an introduction that provides context and glue for the book as a whole. They''re as delightful to read as the pieces themselves, and are classic Cisneros. Her prose reads like poetry, rhythmic and energetic; her poetry is as natural and effortless as plainspoken prose.


In fact, this is what makes Cisneros who she is as a writer: simple, melodious language that explores emotions and brings big ideas down to earth . This memoir has the transcendent sweep of a full life and would make a great movie. It is for anyone looking for inspiration to travel far, live large and write . A full and satisfying portrait [of] how the writer got--and kept--her mojo." --Dwight Silverman, Houston Chronicle   "From her breakout book, The House on Mango Street, to this new collection, Cisneros''s concerns about finding a home have been at the forefront of her work . Now, after decades of traveling [and] as she''s settling into life in Mexico, Cisneros is not only finding a new purpose in her life, but also her longed-for spiritual home. A House of My Own, Cisneros''s new collection of biographical essays and reflections, serves as a memoir of her restlessness and her movement toward happiness, [and] reveals an even greater scope to her talent and thoughtfulness . This supposed provocateur has found a home--and now, so she says, she''s finding her voice.


" --Richard Z. Santos, Kirkus "This Chicago-born writer has always been a fierce talent. No one writes like her, and for a long time, no one told the stories she did so masterfully in her poems and novels, the stories of Mexican people, of working class people. Perhaps most importantly, she wrote her life, a life many of us didn''t know was an option as ''nobody''s mother and nobody''s wife'' .  A House of My Own  is a compilation of true stories and non-fiction pieces that form a ''jigsaw autobiography'' of the author''s life. The thread that connects each story is the idea of home and all that means: building your own for the first time, belonging to two countries, and how our childhood homes shape us. Cisneros is kind and warm and honest: everything you hope your literary hero will be." --Tina Vasquez, Jezebel "The beloved author gets intimate in her new book--a rich compilation of true stories and photos from [her] life and career.


In the introduction, Cisneros explains that the book is a way to understand her life over three decades--from 1984 to 2014 to be exact. A House of My Own  takes readers to many places Cisneros has traveled, from Chiapas, Mexico to Hydra, one of the Saronic Islands of Greece and where she finished writing  The House on Mango Street . A House of My Own  helped Cisneros realize many advantages of growing older. You get to know yourself better, she said, and won''t give your time away to just anyone. ''Your time is the most valuable thing you have,'' she says." --Amaris Castillo, Vivala   "With a phrasing and bravado echoing Saul Bellow''s Augie March, Cisneros writes, ''I was north-of-the-border born and bred, street tough and city smart, wise to the ways of trick or treat.''  Her new autobiographical work is very much about borders and about houses, particularly ''the house one calls the self.'' It is made up of nonfiction chapters, most of which have previously appeared.


Make no mistake, though. A House of My Own isn''t a greatest-hits collection. It is a surprisingly resonant account of Cisneros''s life, which is woven through each of these pieces, regardless of their subject. These essays provide a multiplicity of perspectives on Cisneros, a place where each of these writings can talk with the others, where a conversation can take place while the reader eavesdrops. A complex, nuanced picture of the writer emerges." --Patrick T. Reardon, Chicago Tribune "In A House of My Own , Cisneros takes readers behind the typewriters she has written upon over the decades, revealing the rooms in which her novels and poems were composed, the thoughts circling her mind as she created the characters so many have adored, and introducing the people she loved and lost along the way. [She] talks of words as medicine and libraries as medicine cabinets.


Through her inclusion of book introductions she wrote for other authors, we get rich glimpses into her relationships with fellow writers, sitting with them at tables as they sip beers and share life. And.


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