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Sinkhole: A Legacy of Suicide

Sinkhole: A Legacy of Suicide

by Juliet Patterson

Milkweed Editions ·2022 ·272 pages
Maybe Someday
Maybe Someday
I Index
27/99
Maybe Someday

29/99

Critics' Rating Index

Maybe Someday

25/99

Readers' Rating Index

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Scholars' Citation Index

66/99

Volume of Reviews

14/99

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About This Book

Finalist for the 2023 Minnesota Book Award A sublimely elegant, fractured reckoning with the legacy and inheritance of suicide in one American family. In 2009, Juliet Patterson was recovering from a serious car accident when she learned her father had died by suicide. His death was part of a disturbing pattern in her family. Her father's father had taken his own life; so had her mother's. Over the weeks and months that followed, grieving and in physical pain, Patterson kept returning to one Why? Why had her family lost so many men, so many fathers, and what lay beneath the silence that had taken hold? In three graceful movements, Patterson explores these questions. In the winter of her father's death, she struggles to make sense of the loss—sifting through the few belongings he left behind, looking to signs and symbols for meaning. As the spring thaw comes, she and her mother depart Minnesota for her father's burial in her parents' hometown of Pittsburg, Kansas. A once-prosperous town of promise and of violence, against people and the land, Pittsburg is now literally undermined by abandoned claims and sinkholes. There, Patterson carefully gathers evidence and radically imagines the final days of the grandfathers—one a fiery pro-labor politician, the other a melancholy businessman—she never knew. And finally, she returns to her to the haunting subjects of goodbyes, of loss, and of how to break the cycle. A stunning elegy that vividly enacts Emily Dickinson's dictum to "tell it slant," Sinkhole richly layers personal, familial, political, and environmental histories to provide not answers but essential, heartbreaking truth.


Reviews

"Patterson's poetic sensibility informs her prose as she weaves together ideas about family and research about land in a lyrical way."

Carla Jean Whitley· BookPage Read review ↗ Near the Top

"A searching, often elegant meditation on loneliness, pain, and redemption."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

"While there's catharsis delivered in the book's final pages, it feels rushed in comparison to the evocative familial history that proceeds it."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Sinkhole is a painfully honest and sobering work that may provide insight and comfort to those facing a similar tragedy."

Harvey Freedenberg· Shelf Awareness Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Though the memoir doesn't solve the riddle of suicide or offer a neat narrative arc, it does show the value of remembering and the importance of paying attention."

Christine Brunkhorst· The Minneapolis Star Tribune Read review ↗ Near the Top

"The end result is an elegantly tragic work of research, history, and creative nonfiction that seeks answers, closure, and ultimate peace."

Alana Quarles· Library Journal Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

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