Literary Collections Women Authors
Writing Menopause
An Anthology of Fiction, Poetry and Creative Non-fiction
- Publisher
- Inanna Publications & Education Inc.
- Initial publish date
- Apr 2017
- Category
- Women Authors, Canadian, Women's Studies
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781771333535
- Publish Date
- Apr 2017
- List Price
- $25.95
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781771333542
- Publish Date
- Apr 2017
- List Price
- $12.99
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Where to buy it
Description
The Writing Menopause literary anthology is a diverse and robust collection about menopause: a highly charged and often undervalued transformation. It includes over fifty works of fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, interviews and cross-genre pieces from contributors across Canada and the United States that break new ground in portraying menopause in literature. The collection includes literary work from award-winning writers such as Roberta Rees, Margaret Macpherson, Lisa Couturier and Rona Altrows. Emerging voices such as Rea Tarvydas, Leanna McLennan, Steve Passey and Gemma Meharchand, and an original interview with trans educator and pioneering filmmaker Buck Angel, are also featured. This anthology fills a sizable gap, finding the ground between punchline and pathology, between saccharine inspiration and existential gloom. The authors neither celebrate nor demonize menopause. These are diverse depictions, sometimes lighthearted, but just as often dark and scary. Some voices embrace the prospect of change, others dread it.Together, this unique offering reflects the varied experience of menopause and shatters common stereotypes.
About the authors
Shorter:
Jane Cawthorne is a writer, editor, and feminist activist. Her first novel, Patterson House, is forthcoming with Inanna Publications in 2022. She recently published the anthology, Writing Menopause, with Elaine Morin in 2017. Jane writes about women on the brink of transformation.
Longer:
Jane Cawthorne is a writer, editor, and feminist activist. Her first novel, Patterson House, is forthcoming with Inanna Publications in 2022. She recently published the anthology, Writing Menopause, with Elaine Morin in 2017. She has written about her personal experience with illness before in “The Cure for a Cancer Cliché,” which was the first runner-up in the PRISM International Creative Non Fiction Contest in 2007, and again in her essay, “Something As Big As A Mountain,” published in PRISM in 2012 and listed as a notable essay in Best American Essays 2013.
She has an MFA in Creative Writing and writes about women on the brink of transformation.
E. D. (Elaine) Morin is a writer, editor, and creative writing instructor. Her fiction, poetry, interviews, book reviews, and articles have appeared in such publications as The Antigonish Review, Alberta Views, The Wascana Review and Alternatives Journal, and her work has been produced for broadcast on CBC Radio. A winner of the Brenda Strathern Late Bloomers Writing Prize, awarded at 2007 Calgary International Wordfest, Elaine is a co-director of the annual Calgary reading series, Writing in the Works.
Editorial Reviews
"We live it but we don't often talk about it publicly. Reading this book is like joining a hot conversation of distinct voices, each with a unique approach to storytelling. Their stories are clever, funny, and sometimes, bloody embarrassing. They talk about living with symptoms that keep you awake, melt your skin and your patience, and make you loud, cranky, and tearful. Their stories tell us how menopause shifted their thinking about their bodies, aging, fertility, sexuality and gender identity. When I finished the last page I felt as free as I did getting to the other side of menopause."
--Diana L. Gustafson, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University, St. John's, and co-author of Reproducing Women: Family and Health Work Across Three Generations
"Strong women. Sexy women. Funny, proud, and beautiful women, living life to the full and in charge of their own destiny. Sometimes hot and sweaty, but never afraid. This anthology of poetry and prose provides an inspirational insight into the complexity of women's experience of menopause. There may be lows, but these are far outweighed by the highs. Reading this book made me both laugh and cry, and feel glad to be a woman at mid-life. I recommend it highly."
--Jane M. Ussher, author of The Madness of Women: Myth and Experience, and The Psychology of the Female Body
"This volume breaks the silence surrounding menopause through women's stories of their own experiences of this important life transition. It should be essential reading for health practitioners, women's health researchers, and women living through, or anticipating, this phase of their lives. As the accounts in this book demonstrate, it can often be the best phase."
--Janette Perz, Director of the Centre for Health Research, Western Sydney University
"Remember the not-so-distant past, when women didn't speak about menopause--except in tones that expressed diminishing dread, as if a women's worth was connected to fertility and birth. This collection will help to evolve arcane perceptions. As every woman's experience with menopause is unique, so is every piece in this collection. The more we listen and the more we speak, the more our wisdom surges. The more we learn about our woman-beings, the more we reframe the myths that have isolated us from true nature--from the wild we have in our spirits."
--Sheri-D Wilson, Poet