Girl in Glass: How My "Distressed Baby" Defied the Odds, Shamed a CEO, and Taught Me the Essence of Love, Heartbreak, and Miracles
Autor Deanna Feien Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 iul 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781620409923
ISBN-10: 1620409925
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1620409925
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Great publicity: Deanna Fei's story made national news--the Today show, CBS, CNN, The New York Times, and other media outlets--and her piece on Slate went viral. And it continues to draw attention, eighteen months later and before the hardcover even goes on sale, with a piece in The Washington Post. PBS NewsHour taped Fei at the Health Privacy Summit for which she was keynote speaker.
Notă biografică
Deanna Fei is the author of the award-winning novel A Thread of Sky. A graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop, Fei has received a Fulbright Grant and a New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship. Her essays have appeared in the New York Times, Time, Fortune, and Slate. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and two children. For photos, videos, and more, please visit deannafei.com.
Recenzii
The author has spun a profound work of philosophy and sewn it into the shell of an exquisite memoir. . . A dramatic, step-by-step examination of what it means to sustain a life.
In this courageous and passionate book, Deanna Fei tells the story of delivering a medically fragile child at 25 weeks. Even those who know the outcome will be gripped by the novelistic depiction of oscillating hope and despair. But the real accomplishment of this book is that it takes memoir as a jumping-off point for pondering the obligations attached to scientific progress and collective wealth. In addressing the issue of how much a human life is ultimately worth, it becomes a deeply moving work of moral philosophy.
Deanna Fei has written three gripping tales in one--her transcendent journey as the mother of a child born way too soon; her plunge into the harsh realities of corporate greed and bumbling when a certain CEO publicly labeled her daughter a 'distressed baby'; and her hard-won understanding of what society owes its most fragile beings. Readers will fall in love with Fei's daughter, and come to see that she is all of our children.
Luminous . . . An unflinching testament to the improbable miraculousness of life. This is an astonishing book, full of dark beauty and grace and a hard-earned integrity, one that will haunt me for a long time.
Fei grippingly details her dread, anxiety, and wonder with her second-trimester delivery . . . An urgent call for corporate compassion by a woman with a baby in peril.
Extraordinarily beautiful.
Impassioned, important . . . [Fei] critiques . . . the entire American health-care system. Yet this is not a fire-breathing polemic or a policy tract. It's most effective, and affecting, as a mother's memoir of how her life changed the day her daughter came into the world far too soon . . . [Fei] is an eloquent stylist who writes with immediacy and honesty . . . moving and persuasive.
Raw, unflinching, and beautifully written.
A heartbreaking yet beautiful story of motherhood and love . . . Fei is a gifted writer with a courageous tale to share. This memorable book belongs on the shelf of every library.
[Fei] writes with precision, grace, and a devastating honesty.
This memoir is so starkly, poignantly written, so smart and wrenching, and I just had a truly visceral response to both the story and to Fei's fierce, plain mother love throughout.
Everyone must read this book.
Honest and clear-eyed . . . Mesmerizing
Somehow finding immense bravery amid her turbulent experience, Fei has written a memoir, Girl in Glass . . . She's able to construct a scene with just a few details and go straight to its emotional heart. Her writing immerses readers through intimate vignettes: the first time she was able to embrace her daughter; the daughter's first feedings achieved painstakingly for months; her daughter's first unassisted breaths . . . It's amazing how she's able to ask so many of the hard questions . . . about the value of one fragile human life. Anyone who recognizes or questions the idea that human life has a price tag will want to read this book.
Dramatic . . . Argue[s] eloquently against corporate greed and the bottom line of profit and loss.
One of 2015's most moving and important books.
In this courageous and passionate book, Deanna Fei tells the story of delivering a medically fragile child at 25 weeks. Even those who know the outcome will be gripped by the novelistic depiction of oscillating hope and despair. But the real accomplishment of this book is that it takes memoir as a jumping-off point for pondering the obligations attached to scientific progress and collective wealth. In addressing the issue of how much a human life is ultimately worth, it becomes a deeply moving work of moral philosophy.
Deanna Fei has written three gripping tales in one--her transcendent journey as the mother of a child born way too soon; her plunge into the harsh realities of corporate greed and bumbling when a certain CEO publicly labeled her daughter a 'distressed baby'; and her hard-won understanding of what society owes its most fragile beings. Readers will fall in love with Fei's daughter, and come to see that she is all of our children.
Luminous . . . An unflinching testament to the improbable miraculousness of life. This is an astonishing book, full of dark beauty and grace and a hard-earned integrity, one that will haunt me for a long time.
Fei grippingly details her dread, anxiety, and wonder with her second-trimester delivery . . . An urgent call for corporate compassion by a woman with a baby in peril.
Extraordinarily beautiful.
Impassioned, important . . . [Fei] critiques . . . the entire American health-care system. Yet this is not a fire-breathing polemic or a policy tract. It's most effective, and affecting, as a mother's memoir of how her life changed the day her daughter came into the world far too soon . . . [Fei] is an eloquent stylist who writes with immediacy and honesty . . . moving and persuasive.
Raw, unflinching, and beautifully written.
A heartbreaking yet beautiful story of motherhood and love . . . Fei is a gifted writer with a courageous tale to share. This memorable book belongs on the shelf of every library.
[Fei] writes with precision, grace, and a devastating honesty.
This memoir is so starkly, poignantly written, so smart and wrenching, and I just had a truly visceral response to both the story and to Fei's fierce, plain mother love throughout.
Everyone must read this book.
Honest and clear-eyed . . . Mesmerizing
Somehow finding immense bravery amid her turbulent experience, Fei has written a memoir, Girl in Glass . . . She's able to construct a scene with just a few details and go straight to its emotional heart. Her writing immerses readers through intimate vignettes: the first time she was able to embrace her daughter; the daughter's first feedings achieved painstakingly for months; her daughter's first unassisted breaths . . . It's amazing how she's able to ask so many of the hard questions . . . about the value of one fragile human life. Anyone who recognizes or questions the idea that human life has a price tag will want to read this book.
Dramatic . . . Argue[s] eloquently against corporate greed and the bottom line of profit and loss.
One of 2015's most moving and important books.