Buy new:
$15.01$15.01
$14.88 delivery
Ships from: Amazon.com Sold by: Amazon.com
Buy new:
$15.01$15.01
$14.88 delivery
Ships from: Amazon.com
Sold by: Amazon.com
Buy used: $13.51
Buy used:
$13.51
See Clubs
Loading your book clubs
There was a problem loading your book clubs. Please try again.
Not in a club? Learn more
Join or create book clubs
Choose books together
Track your books
Bring your club to Amazon Book Clubs, start a new book club and invite your friends to join, or find a club that’s right for you for free.
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Raising Girls in Bohemia: Meditations of an American Father: A Memoir in Essays Paperback – October 7, 2014
by
Richard Katrovas
(Author),
Patricia Hampl
(Foreword)
{"desktop_buybox_group_1":[{"displayPrice":"$15.01","priceAmount":15.01,"currencySymbol":"$","integerValue":"15","decimalSeparator":".","fractionalValue":"01","symbolPosition":"left","hasSpace":false,"showFractionalPartIfEmpty":true,"offerListingId":"uDZ8uN0vq34QXFS6UZ73DvJxMA%2FnfZa6N4PznDcjkwUU%2Bb7jxIz7hRd7aFH0Py%2Boi%2FFVHuh8%2BP3qOS7qE8hiYDU55Mscwjkp0VIbgAI%2BN7RJZrg7vbXC8U0P4Gj7zTvIzH%2BUjk6ZMa9bVunZ6iulcA%3D%3D","locale":"en-US","buyingOptionType":"NEW","aapiBuyingOptionIndex":0}, {"displayPrice":"$13.51","priceAmount":13.51,"currencySymbol":"$","integerValue":"13","decimalSeparator":".","fractionalValue":"51","symbolPosition":"left","hasSpace":false,"showFractionalPartIfEmpty":true,"offerListingId":"uDZ8uN0vq34QXFS6UZ73DvJxMA%2FnfZa6LbmTcW9yaSaXHE1lU2oaTv0K9UVn%2B3046EpmMOVv8yJrc3dxQVaOyD7Cy3gfbltnlXprj0HeO3hdMeQYwVz%2FVJvZGnQ3MrQ9659Cwaz%2FCluIZdBs1vIhG%2BF%2B9tkuIP4HdbfkshglbuuQ4qXeJ%2FFWYa3YMPzfKY4Y","locale":"en-US","buyingOptionType":"USED","aapiBuyingOptionIndex":1}]}
Purchase options and add-ons
A provocative collection of personal and political essays by an American writer, Raising Girls in Bohemia chronicles the life of a father raising three perfectly bilingual, culturally bifurcated, Czech-American daughters. While tracing what fatherhood has taught him about the world, Katrovas delves into a range of intricately related yet far-flung subjects including fine dining, sexual epithets, gender identity, racism, poetry, and education, tracing the contours of his ignorance about all things. Through the course of these fine essays, Katrovas unveils what it means to be an American and to be a man, and especially what it means to be a father of three daughters, born in Prague, in what we can only hope is the twilight of patriarchy.
- Print length232 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherThree Rooms Press
- Publication dateOctober 7, 2014
- Dimensions5.2 x 0.8 x 7.9 inches
- ISBN-101941110061
- ISBN-13978-1941110065
Editorial Reviews
Review
At times brutally provocative, Katrovas' essays, which also grapple more generally with otherness, faith and the role of art in society, are nothing if not stimulating
ultimately humane.” --Kirkus Reviews
"[Katrovas] interrogates himself and others, pushing forward, searching for meaning, attempting to use language to tease out truths that cannot be easily spoken. . . . He will all of a sudden rush directly toward his subject with a passage so poetic and deeply felt that it cuts to the heart.” --Washington Independent Review of Books
Katrovas’ memoir in essays is so neatly woven, that the occasional jumps in time embrace rather than lose the reader, and also contribute to the feel of a natural and evolving conversation . . . His personal reflections are superb. Readers will root for Katrovas’ efforts to ensure his daughters feel native to both of their parents’ home countries.” San Francisco Review of Books
"Tough, direct, gritty, full of wonder . . . there is nothing meek about Mr. Katrovas." The New York Times Review of Books
RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA is by turns political and personal, honest and full of insight into the human condition, all filtered through a poet's thoughtful lens. Insightful rumination on being human across geographical and emotional divisions.” Rob LeFebvre, Shelf Awareness
A fascinating nonfiction book about the author’s struggle to raise his three girls in Prague, New Orleans, and Kalamazoo. It explores questions of how to raise women in a hostile society, what it means to be American vs. Czech, how to fall in and out of love, and . . . ideas of otherness.” Dana Norris, Story Studio Chicago
The freshly written, deeply felt essays in RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA: MEDITATIONS OF AN AMERICAN FATHER were fascinating when first published individually in literary magazines. Richard Katrovas vividly conveys the complexity of the relationship between a father and his bilingual daughters who are being raised as citizens of two very different cultures. But to read these essays together adds a welcome sense of an overarching narrative, and dials the level of complexity higher still. The result is a vital, one-of-a-kind book.”
Stuart Dybek, author of The Coast of Chicago
. . . a potent, fascinating book.”
Tracy Kidder, author of Strength in What Remains
A remarkable achievement, a heady ride, wise and knowing.” (from the Foreword)
Patricia Hampl, author of A Romantic Education
Sometimes a person is in the right place at the right time to witness history, which is lucky. Sometimes that person is a writer of Richard Katrovas’s talent, which is even luckier. . . RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA is a clear-eyed, sure-handed, big-hearted book.”
Beth Ann Fennelly, author of Great with Child
By the end of this book, he has, in fact, told the story of his generation, especially the men of his generation. The final essay, Glenn Beck Is Not My Brother,” is the best I know about the heartbreaking divisions in American society today.”
Mark Jarman, author of Bone Fires: New and Selected Poems
If, as Socrates told us, the unexamined life is not worth living, Richard Katrovas demonstrates amply in RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA, that a life considered rationally, and with sensitivity, reveals insight both triumphant and heartbreaking. This is a fascinating book."
Gerald Costanzo, director, Carnegie Mellon University Press
At once deeply personal and strikingly erudite, Richard Katrovas’s RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA is a remarkable achievement. In every piece the voice is authentically his . . . a true memoir and a satisfyingly thought-provoking read.
Elise B. Jorgens, Provost Emerita, College of Charleston
Speaking from first-hand knowledge, I can say that Richard Katrovas is an exemplary parent, friend, and colleague, generous, tough-minded, invigoratingly opinionated, and tender hearted. As a writer of prose and poetry, he is simply an international treasure.”
Arnold Johnston, author of The Witching Voice: A Novel from the Life of Robert Burns
In these trenchant essays, Richard Katrovas strips away the gauzy romanticism of expatriate life to probe the challenges of raising three Czech-American daughters in a culture he cannot fully embraceand that can never fully embrace him in return. . . A must read for anyone interested in the literature of expatriation.”
Robert Eversz, author of Gypsy Hearts
RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA is a brave meditation on the hazards and fleeting forms of happiness available to a navigator of two divergent cultures. . . In these wide-ranging essays, Katrovas examines the nature of freedom, the artist’s role in society, and the impossibility of ever really knowing someone, all with wit and wisdom. This is a wonderful collection.”
Christopher Merrill, author of The Tree of the Doves: Ceremony, Expedition, War
"Partly Mark Twain, partly Henry Miller. It is ferocious, tender, original."
Gerald Stern, author of This Time: New and Selected Poems
"Richard Katrovas is a fine writer...He makes the (reader) feel gratitude, and, in addition to illumination, friendship.”
James Dickey, poet, novelist, author of Deliverance
"As Hemingway portrayed Paris of the twenties, Katrovas portrays...post-revolution Prague. Katrovas is a talented and honest writer who captures the unrenderable, sees the invisible, and makes the truth into poetry."
Arnost Lustig, novelist and playwright, author of A Prayer for Katerina Horowitzowa
"Richard Katrovas is the best of the new poets.”
Denis Johnson, poet and novelist, author of Tree of Smoke (winner, Pulitzer Prize)
"[Katrovas] interrogates himself and others, pushing forward, searching for meaning, attempting to use language to tease out truths that cannot be easily spoken. . . . He will all of a sudden rush directly toward his subject with a passage so poetic and deeply felt that it cuts to the heart.” --Washington Independent Review of Books
Katrovas’ memoir in essays is so neatly woven, that the occasional jumps in time embrace rather than lose the reader, and also contribute to the feel of a natural and evolving conversation . . . His personal reflections are superb. Readers will root for Katrovas’ efforts to ensure his daughters feel native to both of their parents’ home countries.” San Francisco Review of Books
"Tough, direct, gritty, full of wonder . . . there is nothing meek about Mr. Katrovas." The New York Times Review of Books
RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA is by turns political and personal, honest and full of insight into the human condition, all filtered through a poet's thoughtful lens. Insightful rumination on being human across geographical and emotional divisions.” Rob LeFebvre, Shelf Awareness
A fascinating nonfiction book about the author’s struggle to raise his three girls in Prague, New Orleans, and Kalamazoo. It explores questions of how to raise women in a hostile society, what it means to be American vs. Czech, how to fall in and out of love, and . . . ideas of otherness.” Dana Norris, Story Studio Chicago
The freshly written, deeply felt essays in RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA: MEDITATIONS OF AN AMERICAN FATHER were fascinating when first published individually in literary magazines. Richard Katrovas vividly conveys the complexity of the relationship between a father and his bilingual daughters who are being raised as citizens of two very different cultures. But to read these essays together adds a welcome sense of an overarching narrative, and dials the level of complexity higher still. The result is a vital, one-of-a-kind book.”
Stuart Dybek, author of The Coast of Chicago
. . . a potent, fascinating book.”
Tracy Kidder, author of Strength in What Remains
A remarkable achievement, a heady ride, wise and knowing.” (from the Foreword)
Patricia Hampl, author of A Romantic Education
Sometimes a person is in the right place at the right time to witness history, which is lucky. Sometimes that person is a writer of Richard Katrovas’s talent, which is even luckier. . . RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA is a clear-eyed, sure-handed, big-hearted book.”
Beth Ann Fennelly, author of Great with Child
By the end of this book, he has, in fact, told the story of his generation, especially the men of his generation. The final essay, Glenn Beck Is Not My Brother,” is the best I know about the heartbreaking divisions in American society today.”
Mark Jarman, author of Bone Fires: New and Selected Poems
If, as Socrates told us, the unexamined life is not worth living, Richard Katrovas demonstrates amply in RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA, that a life considered rationally, and with sensitivity, reveals insight both triumphant and heartbreaking. This is a fascinating book."
Gerald Costanzo, director, Carnegie Mellon University Press
At once deeply personal and strikingly erudite, Richard Katrovas’s RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA is a remarkable achievement. In every piece the voice is authentically his . . . a true memoir and a satisfyingly thought-provoking read.
Elise B. Jorgens, Provost Emerita, College of Charleston
Speaking from first-hand knowledge, I can say that Richard Katrovas is an exemplary parent, friend, and colleague, generous, tough-minded, invigoratingly opinionated, and tender hearted. As a writer of prose and poetry, he is simply an international treasure.”
Arnold Johnston, author of The Witching Voice: A Novel from the Life of Robert Burns
In these trenchant essays, Richard Katrovas strips away the gauzy romanticism of expatriate life to probe the challenges of raising three Czech-American daughters in a culture he cannot fully embraceand that can never fully embrace him in return. . . A must read for anyone interested in the literature of expatriation.”
Robert Eversz, author of Gypsy Hearts
RAISING GIRLS IN BOHEMIA is a brave meditation on the hazards and fleeting forms of happiness available to a navigator of two divergent cultures. . . In these wide-ranging essays, Katrovas examines the nature of freedom, the artist’s role in society, and the impossibility of ever really knowing someone, all with wit and wisdom. This is a wonderful collection.”
Christopher Merrill, author of The Tree of the Doves: Ceremony, Expedition, War
"Partly Mark Twain, partly Henry Miller. It is ferocious, tender, original."
Gerald Stern, author of This Time: New and Selected Poems
"Richard Katrovas is a fine writer...He makes the (reader) feel gratitude, and, in addition to illumination, friendship.”
James Dickey, poet, novelist, author of Deliverance
"As Hemingway portrayed Paris of the twenties, Katrovas portrays...post-revolution Prague. Katrovas is a talented and honest writer who captures the unrenderable, sees the invisible, and makes the truth into poetry."
Arnost Lustig, novelist and playwright, author of A Prayer for Katerina Horowitzowa
"Richard Katrovas is the best of the new poets.”
Denis Johnson, poet and novelist, author of Tree of Smoke (winner, Pulitzer Prize)
About the Author
The recipient of numerous grants and awards, Richard Katrovas is the founding academic director of the Prague Summer Program, and is the author of seven collections of poetry, a short story collection, a novel, and three memoirs. Katrovas taught for 20 years at the University of New Orleans before moving to Western Michigan University. He divides his time between Kalamazoo, MI, New Orleans, and Prague.
Product details
- Publisher : Three Rooms Press (October 7, 2014)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 232 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1941110061
- ISBN-13 : 978-1941110065
- Item Weight : 9.5 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.2 x 0.8 x 7.9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #5,371,023 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #768 in Deconstructivist Philosophy
- #4,919 in Parenting Girls
- #5,680 in Fatherhood (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
5 out of 5 stars
5 out of 5
2 global ratings
How customer reviews and ratings work
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top review from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Reviewed in the United States on July 29, 2016
This book is well-written and provides a unique insight into the Czech psyche. I grew up in communist Czechoslovakia. I am also a US citizen, so I feel qualified to speak on the subject. I also happen to know some of the "characters" the book mentions personally (e.g. Prof. Quinn). Never have I read a more poignant and truthful account of how Czech men relate to Czech women, how one may get treated in a Czech restaurant or what absurd inner turmoil the small-town Czech stubbornness can cause a foreigner in an everyday transaction (i.e. credit card payment). At times, the reader perceives the author as one's alter-ego standing in his shoes: instead of butting heads, the American magnanimity generously gives way to "Czechishness..." The description of author's life story and his own upbringing provides a fine backdrop on which to "paint" the new generation (his daughters) who have to assimilate and "acculture" their psyche to both worlds: the vastness of the American democracy on the one hand, and the all-too-proud smallness of little Bohemia on the other. Finally, we also learn about the gay culture of New Orleans and the American academia - in an extremely readable way, based on personal experience and actual characters the author actually met and got to know. Great book!