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Jessica Handler

Autor de Invisible Sisters

3+ Obras 132 Miembros 27 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Jessica Handler has written on the topic of writing through grief for The Writer magazine and Psychology Today online, and has been a featured speaker at grief and writing workshops. Her first book, Invisible Sisters, has been named by the Georgia Center for the Book as one of the "Twenty-five mostrar más Books All Georgians Should Read," and is one of the Atlanta Journal-Constitutions "Eight Great Southern Books in 2009." She lives in Atlanta, Georgia. mostrar menos

Incluye el nombre: Handler Jessica

Obras de Jessica Handler

Obras relacionadas

The bitter southerner reader. Vol. 4 (2020) — Contribuidor — 3 copias
A Cozy Infinity: A Cappella at 25 (2014) — Contribuidor — 1 copia
The Bitter Southerner Magazine, issue No. 1 (2021) — Contribuidor — 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
20th century
Género
female

Miembros

Reseñas

When we look at the things that duped people long ago, we are generally pretty amazed that they could be so easily deceived, assuming, of course, that we would never be so gullible. And yet we probably believe any number of things that people in the future will look at and scoff over the way we today look at the mesmerism, spiritualism, and other forms of such obvious chicanery from the nineteenth century. Who will our charlatans turn out to be and what will they tell us about ourselves? Until we know that, we can examine those from the past who still have a hold on our imaginations, even if we no longer believe their sometimes earnest, sometimes intentionally duplicitous assertions. Jessica Handler's novel, The Magnetic Girl, takes one such figure, Lulu Hurst, The Georgia Wonder, and brings her to electrifying life.

Early on convinced that she can control people (and animals) and their actions using just her mind, Lulu Hurst is well primed for what comes next in her life. After lightning strikes the poor Georgia farm where she lives with her parents and her younger disabled brother Leo, she becomes convinced that she can channel electricity through her body in addition to reading people's minds. This belief, coupled with the contents of an unusual book on mesmerism that she finds on her father's bookshelf, pushes Lulu to hone her gifts so that she may one day heal her brother and atone for an accident she believes be the root of his problems. Meanwhile, her father decides to capitalize on her naive, hope-filled belief, teaching and guiding her in her feats of amazing strength, arranging for her to perform locally before taking her magnetic act on the road, captivating audiences throughout the South and up and down the East Coast, always pushing for bigger venues, more publicity, and harder, expanded "tests" of her powers.

The novel is mostly told in first person by Lulu herself with some alternating chapters in third person focusing on her father starting twenty years prior, building the man who would direct and control his daughter's performances. When the book opens, Lulu is naive and hopeful. As she continues, she not only grows into her own power, but she sees and pushes back at the growing exploitation. Her chapters are introspective and thoughtful whereas her father's are much more calculating. Lulu follows her father's lead until she finds her own voice, her own strength, and her own desires. Handler has done a fantastic job evoking the US of post Civil War, an America wanting to believe, needing to contact their so many young men dead before their time, wanting to be amazed by electricity, needing to see the unexplainable and call them miracles. There is a dreamy, detached feel to the narrative and the novel is definitely more character driven than reliant on plot happenings. It is well written, but slow paced and populated with odd characters so it may not be for everyone but those who are fascinated by our human ability to humbug and be humbugged will certainly enjoy watching Lulu perform on the page for them.
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Denunciada
whitreidtan | Sep 12, 2019 |
Having just read a host of memoirs about loss, grief, illness, strong mothers, tormented fathers who fall apart during hard times and excruciating circumstances Invisible Sisters stands out as being one of the best. Jessica Handler's memoir about the death of her two sisters, and the disintegration of her family, especially her father is searing and honest and matter-of-fact and I inhaled this book over the course of a day.

Like many families the Handlers did not talk about the death of their daughter, Susie who died at age 8 from Leukemia. Since the time that Susie was diagnosed her parents managed this life-altering fact in opposite ways and after her death her "parents began the slow and terrible turning away from one another that erodes families facing the death of a child." Very soon after her father mentally and psychically fell apart and the family that Jessica knew was gone. For Jessica, the "well" daughter, there was expectations to meet and hopes to fulfill, conflicts to mediate between parents and the need to protect; her other sister, her mother and mostly herself. Lost, without much support she left home early, bereft and alone with death as her companion.

I understand all of this. As someone who grew up with the specter of death shadowing my family there is no way out of it terrorizing you. So you can tentatively try to make friends with it, you can accept that you will be frighted and sickened and devastated by fear, be immobilized by it, live life as fully as possible, forget about it and do all of this at once. This is what I treasure about Jessica's smart and gracious book. She comes to know this and as she worked to save herself, with the support and love of her mother, husband and community of people around her, she hands herself back a life full of meaning and peace.

Thank you NetGalley for allowing me to review this book for an honest opinion.
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Denunciada
Karen59 | 25 reseñas más. | Sep 19, 2015 |
I think this memoir was very cathartic for the author. By the time she was 10 she had lost one sister to leukemia and her other was diagnosed with a rare blood disorder.

Jessica Handler tells of how her family basically slowly fell apart after the death of her younger sister, Susie, at the age of 8. Invisible Sisters tells her story, the "well sibling," as she called herself. It follows her path through childhood, her college years and into adulthood.

I'm not sure why it didn't strike a cord with me. I think I felt that it was almost written from an observers point of view rather than an actual member of the family even though Ms. Handler did go into her feelings at different points.

This book was provided to me free through Netgalley.com for review purposes.
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Diane_K | 25 reseñas más. | Sep 8, 2015 |
What the loss of a woman's two sisters does to her family and to her own childhood. Wish I could put my finger on what is missing here, but something I wish this book had is more from or about the mother and the other sister who made it to adulthood before dying.
 
Denunciada
olevia | 25 reseñas más. | Apr 5, 2013 |

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Miembros
132
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#153,555
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27
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