Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?
by Jeanette Winterson
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Pub Date Oct 27 2011 | Archive Date Aug 05 2014
Random House UK, Vintage Publishing | Vintage Digital
Description
The shocking, heart-breaking - and often very funny - true story behind Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit.
In 1985 Jeanette Winterson's first novel, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, was published. It was Jeanette's version of the story of a terraced house in Accrington, an adopted child, and the thwarted giantess Mrs Winterson. It was a cover story, a painful past written over and repainted. It was a story of survival.
This book is that story's the silent twin. It is full of hurt and humour and a fierce love of life. It is about the pursuit of happiness, about lessons in love, the search for a mother and a journey into madness and out again. It is generous, honest and true.
‘Unforgettable… It’s the best book I have ever read about the cost of growing up’ Daisy Goodwin, Sunday Times
**ONE OF THE GUARDIAN'S 100 BEST BOOKS OF THE 21st CENTURY**
A Note From the Publisher
UK edition - available for readers in the UK, Europe and Commonwealth (excluding Canada) only.
Advance Praise
Vivid, unpredictable, and sometimes mind-rattling memoir...
This book... which had been funny enough to make me laugh out loud more
times than is advisable on the No 12 bus - turns into something raw and
unnerving - Observer
This is certainly the most moving book of Winterson's I have ever read... but it wriggles with humour... At one point I was crying so much I had tears in my ears.
There is much here that is impressive, but what I find most unusual
about it is the way it deepens one's sympathy, for everyone involved - Guardian
In the 26 years since the publication of her highly acclaimed first novel, Oranges are Not the Only Fruit,
Jeanette Winterson has proved herself a writer of startling invention,
originality and style. Her combination of the magical and the earthy,
the rapturous and the matter-of-fact, is unique. It is a strange and
felicitous gift, as if the best of Gabriel Garcia Marquez was combined
with the best of Alan Bennett... This remarkable account is, among other
things, a powerful argument for reading... This memoir is brave and
beautiful, a testament to the forces of intelligence, heart and
imagination. It is a marvellous book and generous one - Spectator
Both inspiring and appalling, its cruellest details only made digestible by the restrained elegance of Winterson's prose - Independent on Sunday
An essential new book... she is a natural memoirist. The first half is a mature retelling of her masterwork, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit... The second half is a wry, urgent account of her hunt for her birth mother... Pressed on by the need for self discovery, the prose doesn't miss a beat... it feels risky and alive - Evening Standard
A dazzling autobiography, this is a love letter to literature as a means to survive - GQ
While Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal? is
rich in autobiographical detail, it is a wide and bold an experiment in
the memoir form as any so far written... in writing that is
astonishingly naked and brave, Winterson reveals the legacy of that
difficult and painful childhood... Much of this book is laugh-out-loud
funny... Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal? is proudly,
and sometimes painfully, honest.It is also, arguably, the finest and
most hopeful memoir to emerge in many years and, as such, it should not
be missed - The Times
It is clear from the first page of this shattering, brilliant memoir that the black humour of Oranges was there to disguise the true awfulness of her childhood. If things were bad in Winterson's fictional world, the reality was much, much worse... There is a sense at the end of this brave, funny, heartbreaking book that
Winterson has somehow reconciled herself to her past... Her childhood
was ghastly, as bad as Dickens's stint in the blacking factory, but it
was also the crucible for her incendiary talent - Sunday Times
Boasts everything that she does best: courage, ferocity and prose that soars - New Statesman, Books of the Year
In
memoir, honesty matters more than anything but, when married with
humour, wit and elan vital of Jeanette Winterson's [book], it is a
transformative force - New Statesman, Books of the Year
The
specifics of her early abuse is vivid, violent, and no less horrifying
for its familiarity... If the memoir was begun as a final exorcism of
the monster mother, it ends with a moving acceptance of her - Independent
Moved
me deeply. [It] celebrates the redeeming power of the written word and
is undercut with an irresistible humour born of residence in hardship - Evening Standard, Books of the Year
An extraordinary tragic-comic literary autobiography - Guardian, Books of the Year
There
is something darkly Dickensian in the urgency and energy of her
character and quest, in the acute, abrupt style of her self-presentation
and in the extreme characters who have informed her life - The Times
Funny and scary mixed together, in the manner of the Brothers Grimm, sharp as a knife, round as a child's eye - Daily Telegraph
Difficult, spirited, engaging... a resonant affirmation of the power of storytelling to make things better - Daily Mail
Moving, turbulent - Guardian
Shattering,
brilliant memoir... Here childhood eas ghastly, as bad as Dickens's
stint in the blacking factory, but it was also the crucible for her
incendiary talent - Sunday Times
Verbalyl dazzling, emotionally searing, compassionate and often hilarious memoir - Daily Mail
Jeanette
Winterson's new memoir appears to have been highly praised, rightly it
seems to me, for its zest and candour and noted for a quality that some
reviewers have seen as haste or even carelessness but which I see as her
characteristic lively, pugnacious inventiveness. - Bibliophilic Blogger
The
prose is breathtaking: witty, biblical, chatty and vigorous all at
once. She defines the pursuit of happiness not as being content (which
is "fleeting" and "a bit bovine"), but as the impulse to "swim
upstream", the search for a meaningful life. This breathless, powerful
book is that search. - Financial Times
Winterson
is a bold author with a track record of writing imaginative
transformation tales, and this is a work about the power of words,
stories and books to give identity to a life that is in turns shocking,
funny, warm and wise. - Metro
Engaging memoir. - Daily Telegraph
There clear-eyed, drily witty, searingly moving memoir. - Telegraph
It
does all that committed fans might hope... This is far funnier than the
novel that made Winterson’s name... Brilliant book. - The Times
An
inspirational memoir written in beautiful exact prose that celebrates
the wildness of the ordinary. Winterson’s understanding of who she is…
is both appallingly funny and deeply moving. Essential reading for
anyone with a snitch of an interest in writing - The Times
Why Be Happy When You Can Be Normal?
burrowed deep and made me laugh and weep. This memoir has a great
warmth and an intensity and honesty that is rare and the writing is
exceptional - Herald
Winterson’s
unconventional and winning memoir wrings humor from adversity as it
describes her upbringing by a wildly deranged mother - New York Times
Marketing Plan
The shocking, heart-breaking - and often very funny - true story behind Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit
Fascinating memoir by an acclaimed and controversial author sure of wide review coverage
Why Be Happy... continues the story started by Oranges, giving more details of Jeanette Winterson's extraordinary upbringing and her recent search to find her real mother.
Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit has sold over a million copies. It was a sensation when first published 26 years ago and proclaimed the arrival of an original, brave new voice. JW is continually asked by fans if she will write a sequel.
Adoption is a subject continually in the press - the Observer ran a special report on the end of the 'happy ever after' system in winter 2010
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9781446402115 |
PRICE | £9.98 (GBP) |