Trying
A Memoir
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- 8,49 €
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- 8,49 €
Publisher Description
Everyone loves a story about people who beat the odds. But what about those who didn't?
In the years she spent hoping to conceive a child with her husband, Chloé Caldwell consumed everything she could find on infertility. No matter the book or reddit forum, her experiences seemed absent amid stories of IVF and miracle babies.
Bouncing between her job at a boutique selling 'life-changing pants' and the fertility clinic offering 'innovative ways to create your family', Caldwell ignored the sense that something else in her life was wrong – until she extracted a confession from her husband.
In this candid and intimate memoir, Caldwell confronts the irresolution and uncertainty of those denied their deepest desire to become a mother and discovers how, even in the depths of grief, new pleasures and possibilities can be found.
What begins as an account of trying to create life becomes a bold and brave journey to rebuild one's own.
At once hilarious and heartbreaking, Trying reveals how, even when life blows up, sometimes it's only the beginning.
'Funny, wise and uplifting... You will pick up this book and fly through its pages' - Stylist
'Trying moved me and consumed me; it's a great gutting swirl of grief and freedom and vitality. A searing whispered vision. I am grateful for it' - Leslie Jamison, author of Splinters: Another Kind of Love Story
'Caldwell describes desire like no one else... Every sentence is intimate and stunning' - Jill Louise Busby, author of Unfollow Me: Essays on Complicity
'The queen of irreverence and confessionalism... Caldwell gives readers a wide-eyed look at her life in a time of great uncertainty. With tenderness, humility, curiosity and familiarity that readers have come to expect from Caldwell, her latest memoir is a touching and liberating look into identity, fertility and becoming' - Paste Magazine
'Confessional writing at its best' - Brooklyn Rail
'Caldwell's compact and wide-ranging musings are wry surprising and fresh' - Amy Fusselman, author of The Means
'In Trying, Caldwell shows – in the most hilarious, heartbreaking ways – how our culture drives women batshit crazy and then pretends this insanity is healthy adulthood. What a relief to watch a woman become truly sane: wild, free, spontaneous, slutty, unapologetic, fully alive' - Hannah Tennant-Moore, author of Wreck and Order
'When I finished reading the book, I began it again. I found pleasure in the limbo, in the between. I wanted to be in Caldwell's language forever' - LA Warman
'A fearless ode to unrequited desire' - Steve Almond, author of Truth is the Arrow, Mercy is the Bow
'An intimate, engaging memoir' - Kirkus Reviews
For fans of Kirsty Logan’s The Unfamiliar, The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson and Untamed by Glennon Doyle.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this hypnotic account, Caldwell (The Red Zone) chronicles a transformative stretch of her mid-30s. The title pulls triple duty: much of the book concerns Caldwell "trying" to get pregnant, which proves "trying" after years of failed treatments. When her husband admits his addiction to hiring sex workers and their marriage implodes, the title also nods to Caldwell "trying" to make their union work despite her preference for women. Told in short, poetic dispatches—many of which span less than a page—the book's first half marinates in the mundane awfulness of infertility, with Caldwell's signature wryness leavening the gloom. ("I shouldn't expect the writers of Friends to know all of this," she writes after pointing out the medical impossibility of the character Phoebe's pregnancy. "I just wish I didn't have to know it all, either.") Then her husband's transgressions jolt the narrative off its axis, and Caldwell recounts the dizzying liberation of rediscovering her queerness after her divorce. This reads more like a journal than a tidy narrative; there's little resolution on offer, just artful questioning. For readers grappling with similar questions about motherhood, sexuality, and the meaning of a life well-lived, it's a gift.