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Mirror Mirror: A Collection of Memoirs and…
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Mirror Mirror: A Collection of Memoirs and Stories (edición 2012)

por Stephanie Hart

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
22131,025,315 (3.15)1
Mirror Mirror: A Collection of Memoirs and Stories, Stephanie Hart s third book, is composed of a series of fast-paced vignettes that explore her childhood, youth, family, and ancestral background through a mix of real and imagined memories and events. She recounts and interprets the unique details of her own life, bringing to life the personalities and experiences of various relatives and friends in an intimate, heartbreaking, and often humorous manner. Her rich prose is evocative and poetic, yet highly accessible and engaging. Her story becomes a window into many lives, lives most readers will find reflected in their own personal narratives, encouraging them to revisit and re-imagine their own family backgrounds. Seamlessly blending past and present, Stephanie takes us from Manhattan of the 1950s to Moscow and Odessa circa 1800s, where she imaginatively renders the lives of her grandparents and great grandparents, and then takes us into the twenty-first century. She bares her soul by inviting readers into her world: her magical and unsettling early childhood by the sea, her years spent as the only Jewish girl in a Presbyterian boarding school, her urban high school years during which conflict with her mercurial and charismatic mother reaches a crescendo, and the weight of her father s anger and unrealized dreams press down upon her. While acknowledging the mirror of the past, she shows us the love and friendship reflected in her current life, celebrating the generative power of each moment to transform experience. Editorial Reviews: Reflective readers, who seek artistic healing of the common hurts of growing up and growing older, will find that Mirror Mirror speaks powerfully. The] consistent, nostalgic tone gives the book a savoring, contemplative speed. Each chapter is laden with vivid yet sometimes enigmatic images, alluring readers with crisp evocations of mood and poignant descriptions of characters. R]eflective readers, who seek artistic healing of the common hurts of growing up and growing older, will find that Mirror Mirror speaks powerfully. Foreword Reviews Hart s memoir charts her psychological process of overcoming a painful childhood. This bittersweet collage of memories is categorized into five sections. Hart s lyrical, well-paced prose saves her story from falling into the poor me category of memoirs. Her smooth writing style, sharp insights and eye for detail make her family problems compelling. But while interesting separately, the somewhat fragmented vignettes are more significant because Hart has rendered them into a complete picture. Indeed, this collection illustrates Socrates philosophy that the unexamined life is not worth living. Each section reads as though she intuitively regressed to capture the emotional mindset of whatever age she was recalling. She also reveals how she rose above the negativity and eventually realized her authentic self. The stories culled from her memory, as well as the way in which they re analyzed and organized, map a process of overcoming childhood adversity. A hopeful, finely rendered portrait of a dysfunctional family and its effects on the author. Kirkus Reviews About the Author Stephanie Hart teaches writing at the Fashion Institute of Technology and Parsons The New School for Design in New York City. Hart is also the author of Clouds Like Horses and Other Stories (which contains some of the stories of Mirror Mirror) and the young adult novel Is There Any Way Out of Sixth Grade? A member of Poets and Writers, and the Authors Guild, her stories and essays have appeared in anthologies such as Mondo James Dean, The Best Stories from ducts.org, and literary magazines including The Sun, Jewish Currents, And Then, and ducts.org. For more information, visit: mirrormorrorhart.com… (más)
Miembro:eileenduhne
Título:Mirror Mirror: A Collection of Memoirs and Stories
Autores:Stephanie Hart
Información:And Then Press (2012), Paperback, 236 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca
Valoración:*****
Etiquetas:mother-daughter relationships, family

Información de la obra

Mirror Mirror: A Collection of Memoirs and Stories por Stephanie Hart

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Mostrando 1-5 de 13 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I liked this book. I thought the short little stories were interesting and made me feel nostalgic for different parts of my childhood.
  OracleOfCrows | Sep 21, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita para Sorteo de miembros LibraryThing.
This book was okay, maybe not my type of book. Stephanie Hart excelled at painting pictures in my mind, but I otherwise felt the book was focused on darkness and death. While life always has its ups and downs, I felt that this book focused very much on the downs and I personally prefer to read books about the ups. I also found the order of some of the vignettes to be disjointed at times. I did not totally dislike the book, but perhaps I failed to understand why I would like to know about this person's history. ( )
  dockdc | Jun 16, 2012 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I had mixed feelings about this book. I like the idea of organizing a memoir in the form of separate but connected essays, and I enjoyed the first three chapters, in which Stephanie Hart writes about her childhood and youth through the lens of her troubled relationship with her mother and her experiences at boarding school and then high school. But she lost me when she got to the family history. It was such an abrupt turn in what had been a loose, but still connected, narrative. And I had no real interest in these people she was writing about. I hadn't met them before. None of it was about her relationships with these people or how her experiences with them affected her life. So since this is supposed to be a memoir about Hart's life as it interacted with the people who helped form and shape her, why would I care about them?

It's well-written and definitely compelling in parts, but ultimately the book fails because it doesn't hold together. ( )
  katkat50 | May 21, 2012 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita para Sorteo de miembros LibraryThing.
Mirror Mirror by Stephanie Hart is a series of short, one- to two-page vignettes of a personal nature, dipping into family history and memory. Why read stories about another person's life? What makes one person's stories worth telling and sharing? I am a fan of personal narratives and memoirs; however, Mirror Mirror has nothing to offer an outside reader. From the very first paragraph, the work fails to grab, nevermind hold, audience interest. This is the world in cliché and incomplete thoughts.

The lack of strong writing and abundance of choppy prose distorts the individual stories and disorients readers. The author seems to sling cheap phrases at readers in a failed attempt to reach a profound understanding of her life. What she tries to make significant comes across as incomplete and juvenile. This book consists entirely of piecemeal construction reminiscent of a child's mind and ability. I recommend skipping this read. ( )
  JustusKat | May 7, 2012 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I have to say I didn't really like this book it had to much this is what I wore this is what they wore kind of stuff in it for my taste but if you like that kind of thing I think you'll like it better then I did.

I'm starting to think that memoirs are just not my thing because the people who write them always seem to me to be very hard on the people around them and not hard enough on themselves. ( )
  thelittlematchgirl | Apr 21, 2012 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 13 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
I've never met Stephanie Hart, but I know her from the two-page vignettes she's created in her book. Each story that she tells, in turn, vividly captures the most important, most traumatic, most wonderful, most pensive, most informing moments of her life. And who are we but a collection of all those moments?

Beautifully written and mostly in chronological order, her first memory begins at the dinner table with her parents. The short, simple sentences in the Early Years section reflect a child's innate understanding of the tension in her family and the presentiment of things to come. The language and sentence structure matures as Hart does, and along the way, Hart draws us closer by time-stamping her life with pivotal memories that many of us share, i.e. Kennedy's election, his assassination, the opening of West Side Story, the New York skyline before the fall of the towers, the Vietnam war protests, the nation's fixation with the quirky soap opera, Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman.

Every snippet of Hart's life is like the tap tap tap of a hammer on a starter nail, positioning the reader for the final pounding when it becomes clear that despite all our differences, she has not only managed to put her life into words but has turned the mirror to reflect the most powerful memories of the reader.

Hart has a fine command of the English language. Found only one typo in the section called Idolatry - taunt instead of taut. And in my opinion, the last chapter seemed misplaced. I thought that the next to last chapter brought the book to a close very nicely. I would have switched the order of the two.
 
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Mirror Mirror: A Collection of Memoirs and Stories, Stephanie Hart s third book, is composed of a series of fast-paced vignettes that explore her childhood, youth, family, and ancestral background through a mix of real and imagined memories and events. She recounts and interprets the unique details of her own life, bringing to life the personalities and experiences of various relatives and friends in an intimate, heartbreaking, and often humorous manner. Her rich prose is evocative and poetic, yet highly accessible and engaging. Her story becomes a window into many lives, lives most readers will find reflected in their own personal narratives, encouraging them to revisit and re-imagine their own family backgrounds. Seamlessly blending past and present, Stephanie takes us from Manhattan of the 1950s to Moscow and Odessa circa 1800s, where she imaginatively renders the lives of her grandparents and great grandparents, and then takes us into the twenty-first century. She bares her soul by inviting readers into her world: her magical and unsettling early childhood by the sea, her years spent as the only Jewish girl in a Presbyterian boarding school, her urban high school years during which conflict with her mercurial and charismatic mother reaches a crescendo, and the weight of her father s anger and unrealized dreams press down upon her. While acknowledging the mirror of the past, she shows us the love and friendship reflected in her current life, celebrating the generative power of each moment to transform experience. Editorial Reviews: Reflective readers, who seek artistic healing of the common hurts of growing up and growing older, will find that Mirror Mirror speaks powerfully. The] consistent, nostalgic tone gives the book a savoring, contemplative speed. Each chapter is laden with vivid yet sometimes enigmatic images, alluring readers with crisp evocations of mood and poignant descriptions of characters. R]eflective readers, who seek artistic healing of the common hurts of growing up and growing older, will find that Mirror Mirror speaks powerfully. Foreword Reviews Hart s memoir charts her psychological process of overcoming a painful childhood. This bittersweet collage of memories is categorized into five sections. Hart s lyrical, well-paced prose saves her story from falling into the poor me category of memoirs. Her smooth writing style, sharp insights and eye for detail make her family problems compelling. But while interesting separately, the somewhat fragmented vignettes are more significant because Hart has rendered them into a complete picture. Indeed, this collection illustrates Socrates philosophy that the unexamined life is not worth living. Each section reads as though she intuitively regressed to capture the emotional mindset of whatever age she was recalling. She also reveals how she rose above the negativity and eventually realized her authentic self. The stories culled from her memory, as well as the way in which they re analyzed and organized, map a process of overcoming childhood adversity. A hopeful, finely rendered portrait of a dysfunctional family and its effects on the author. Kirkus Reviews About the Author Stephanie Hart teaches writing at the Fashion Institute of Technology and Parsons The New School for Design in New York City. Hart is also the author of Clouds Like Horses and Other Stories (which contains some of the stories of Mirror Mirror) and the young adult novel Is There Any Way Out of Sixth Grade? A member of Poets and Writers, and the Authors Guild, her stories and essays have appeared in anthologies such as Mondo James Dean, The Best Stories from ducts.org, and literary magazines including The Sun, Jewish Currents, And Then, and ducts.org. For more information, visit: mirrormorrorhart.com

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