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Room Lit by Roses by Carole Maso — book cover

Room Lit by Roses

by Carole Maso
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Overview

A poetic memoir of the writer's pregnancy and the birth of her daughter, Rose—a magical journal of joy, pain, hope, and parenthood.

"Maso gives us a beautiful and surprising guided tour of creation...Turning biology and chemistry into poetry, she celebrates every microscopic development...The result, A Room Lit by Roses, provides a glimpse into an invisible world." -Village Voice

"She renders the wonder and agony of childbirth and the glimpse of eternity in every newborn in searing, often sublime prose." -San Francisco Chronicle

"Amazingly right on, Maso's stream-of-consciousness musings about brand-new motherhood—especially the tumult of emotions that follow a birth—blew this brand-new mother away." -Utne Reader

From one of our most daring writers comes this intimate and seductive book: a working journal of pregnancy that was both a Lambda Literary Awards finalist and a Village Voice pick for "Best Books of 2000." Maso chronicles with great tenderness and awe the months of her pregnancy, from its charmed conception through the auspicious arrival of Rose.

Author Biography: Carole Maso is the author of six novels, including Ghost Dance and Defiance. She is a professor of English at Brown University.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In lush, elliptical language, Maso (The Art Lover, etc.) charts her first experience with pregnancy and new motherhood in a journal that reads like prose poetry, couching the mysterious experience in surprising forms, syntaxes and imagery. She records the unexpected sense of well-being and faith that accompany her pregnancy: "I've got to say I'm really quite pleased with myself. I am no longer someone I entirely recognize. A kind of wayward haloDleast likely to become an angel or a chaliceDand yet.... To be myself and yet to be so much greater than myself." She also chronicles the fatigue: "Cannot even imagine getting up. How to get to school?... Everything small as if seen from a great distance. The fierce attachments to this world begin to loosen." Maso also explores how, by age 42, she had accepted that she wouldn't have a child, until she and Helen, her partner of 20 years, traveled to Italy and prayed for a baby in a series of chapels and cathedrals. After nights of planned passion with men (alluded to coyly, without specifics), Maso gets her wish. Her father wonders how they all will manageDthe subtext is, "What will people think?" At Brown University, where she teaches creative writing, students notice a radical change in her. Helen, who wanted the child most of all, remains stoic and supportive throughout Maso's prenatal and postpartum vagaries, even though Maso at times leaves her out of the loop. Though Maso's wide-eyed descriptions of the miracles of pregnancy can seem self-indulgent, her dreamlike treatment of pregnancy, birth, mothering and writing should enchant mothers, mothers-to-be and writers with a poetic bent. (Dec.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Maso's experiences during the pregnancy and birth of her daughter, Rose, are the focus of this unique book--a combination of prose and poetry written in journal form. Maso's writing style is not for everyone; she's exhibited her experimental style in novels like Aureole (LJ 11/1/96) and a recent collection of essays, Break Every Word (LJ 5/1/00). However, she isn't aiming for a mass audience. Using her own anxieties, anticipation, and love, she has written an important examination of one of the most important passages of a woman's life. This book is highly recommended for public and academic libraries, especially those with women's studies materials.--Mee-Len Hom, Hunter Coll. Lib., New York Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
May 30, 2002
Publisher
Counterpoint
Pages
188
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781582432120

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