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Wet Earth and Dreams: A Narrative of Grief and Recovery [Hardcover]

Jane Lazarre (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

Price: $64.95 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

July 1, 1998
“In the spring of 1995, the condition I seem to have been waiting for all my life finally struck me.” So begins Jane Lazarre’s account of her transforming battle with breast cancer. Following in the tradition of her critically acclaimed literary memoirs The Mother Knot and Beyond the Whiteness of Whiteness: Memoir of a White Mother of Black Sons, Lazarre brilliantly interweaves her experience of life-threatening illness with other stories of recent and past losses—most notably, that of her mother to breast cancer when Jane was a small child. From these memories and experiences, Lazarre crafts a story that is at once intensely intimate and universally healing.

As she contends with the pain and many indignities of her treatment for cancer, Lazarre realizes that successful medical treatment will only be part of her healing process. Her own illness becomes the vehicle for coming to terms with key moments of loss and grief—the death of a beloved therapist from breast cancer, her brother-in-law’s death from AIDS, a traumatic disappointment in her work life, and the unresolved pain of being a motherless child. The gift of Lazarre’s writing is her ability to transform her narratives of grief and loss into a story whose power to heal lies in its ability to penetrate the unconscious and give voice to the elusive truths hidden there. Through her writing, Lazarre is able to embrace grief—even her own inarticulate grief as a child—and find her way through the story to a restored sense of wholeness.

In Wet Earth and Dreams Jane Lazarre once again proves herself to be both companion and guide through some of the most difficult challenges life has to offer. As always, she draws strength not only from sustaining friendship and love, but also from her own faith in the power of storytelling to make bearable the seemingly unbearable. Lazarre’s bravely and beautifully written account of grief, illness, and death is at the last a celebration of the redemptive possibilities of the creative spirit.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Reading Lazarre's (Beyond the Whiteness of Whiteness: Memoir of a White Mother of Black Sons) latest is like spending time with a friend, albeit an intense and occasionally neurotic one who can lapse into trendy psychobabble ("I must recover this desire so its hopelessness can be separated from all other desires, its horrible futility leaving me with shame or with dread or with nothing or with rage"). What Lazarre desires is her mother, who died of breast cancer when Lazarre was seven. That experience shaped Lazarre's life and this engrossing memoir. Grief and recovery figure heavily in the narrative, in which she copes with her own breast cancer and, in the process, comes to terms with her mother's death and the silence in which her family shrouded it. But this is no exercise in self-pity and self-absorption, nor is it a one-dimensional look at illness. Lazarre does offer vivid and often frightening glimpses into treatment, such as the nurse who yells, "Do you want to compromise your longevity?!" when questioned about overlapping radiation with chemotherapy, and the radiation attendant who tells Lazarre, "with a stunning, callous smile," that the black cross inked on her chest is there for the medical staff's convenience. But mostly this is Lazarre's effort to come to grips with who she is and how she became that way. It's a story bound to move anyone who has ever experienced love or loss.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

For Lazarre, a diagnosis of breast cancer brought a frightening reminder of her mother's death at 38 of the same disease. Here she tells of her experience with cancer and the treatment she underwent, all of which topped off other painful losses: her brother-in-law's death of AIDS, her trusted psychotherapist's death from breast cancer, and a publisher's rejection of a manuscript she had worked on for years. Lazarre, the author of numerous novels and memoirs, including The Mother Knot (Duke Univ., 1997), finds a respite in words, in trying to fashion them so that they articulate the emotions she feels. Her stream-of-consciousness narrative rescues the book from being just another story of illness. Although she deals with disease and sadness, she achieves the overall effect of healing, coming to terms with past losses and reclaiming wholeness. This book will appeal to women, especially those who have had experience with cancer.?Nancy R. Ives, SUNY at Geneseo
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 136 pages
  • Publisher: Duke University Press Books; First edition (July 1, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0822322064
  • ISBN-13: 978-0822322061
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 5.9 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,379,085 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Grief and joy interwoven in marvelous prose., February 10, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Wet Earth and Dreams: A Narrative of Grief and Recovery (Hardcover)
More than just a story of surmounting physical illness (in Lazarre's case, breast cancer), this is a story in which physical survival becomes a metaphor for emotional healing. One of the book's great pleasures is its structure,for rather than tell her story from beginning to end, Lazarre explores how different memories echo and amplify one another: the bewildered pain of a young daughter at her mother's cancer death, the adult woman's successive responses to the loss of a therapist and a brother-in-law, and finally her own breast cancer diagnosis. While the subject matter may sound grim, the language and above all the author's quiet determination to honor her memories as part of her own living future left me with not only a sense of admiration for Lazarre's courage, but a heightened confidence in my own ability to make meaning in the aftermath of the deepest personal losses. Finally, this is an incredibly moving story of mothers and daughters, and of the ways in which a daughter's longing can, ironically, estrange her from the woman she fears to resemble. The clarity of the images and graceful simplicity of the prose are poetic without any of the fussiness of some works that bill themselves as prose poetry. Read it slowly. Reread.
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4.0 out of 5 stars the prose, October 29, 2009
By 
Angela J. Bass "ajb_80" (Oakland, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Wet Earth and Dreams: A Narrative of Grief and Recovery (Hardcover)
I read this book about nine years ago. I happened upon it in the library one day, started reading the first page, then the second page, then I just checked it out.

Like the previous reviewer mentioned, I read this book slowly, mainly because as a young writer, I really wanted to study her writing style. I went on to read one of her other books 'Beyond the Whiteness of Whiteness' and it is also beautifully and emotionally written.

It's a trip because this book, this author, became one of my biggest influences (and still is). In my creative writing class a few years back, I even wrote a short story about a young girl who remembers her mother, who died of breast cancer, through food and cooking. The emotional scenes were informed by the impact that Wet Earth had on me. The book helped me bring the humanity into my own story. Hmmm...kind of hard to explain.

Well, I remember feeling deeply moved by this book. I'd like to read it again someday.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
When I awoke in the recovery room after two hours of anesthesia, during which time a cancerous tumor two centimeters large had been removed from my breast and eleven lymph nodes from under my arm, the threat which I felt I had to resist at any cost was unconsciousness. Read the first page
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African American, New York, San Francisco, Wellfleet Bay, Los Angeles
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