Marcie Hershman is the author of the acclaimed novels Tales of the Master Race and Safe in America. A former writer-in-residence at Brandeis University, she teaches at Tufts University and lives near Boston.
A heartbreaking, heart-healing meditation on memory and the human
voice. . . . Hershman bears fresh witness to the ancient insight
that love is stronger than death. --Anita Diamant, author of The
Red Tent
"Richly nuanced, heightened by its brevity, Hershman's prose
compels the reader forward, garnering trust in her perceptions. . .
. Wise, lyrical and deeply moving." --Publishers Weekly
"A passionate meditation on the sound of others' voices, on the way
they can come to us through the magic of technology or the mystery
of dreams, expressing love, assuaging grief, or communicating the
mystical faiths we create for ourselves when the framework of
received faith is not enough to support us in our need and our
sorrow. If the book weren't so beautifully written, it would be
almost too painful to read." --Amanda Heller, The Boston Globe
"What a radiant and intelligent book Marcie Hershman has written
not just about the loss of her beloved brother, though that would
be quite enough, but about the losses we must all endure. [It]
speaks to all of us about how to live in the world. Read it."
--Margot Livesey, author of Eva Moves the Furniture
"[A] sweet, powerful, longing, and lyrical memoir. This writing
hears its own echoes and allows for silence. [Hershman's] voice,
bound by skepticism, still opens to the miraculous." --Rodger
Kamenetz, author of Stalking Elijah
"One of those rare books that leave you feeling it has contributed
to your life." --Jean Charbonneau, Cleveland Plain Dealer
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