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Nonfiction

Home  / Nonfiction

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  • ADDED

    50 Miles by Sheryl St. Germain

    50 Miles is a memoir in linked essays that addresses addiction and alcoholism. The book traces the life of the author’s son, Gray, a talented but troubled young man, and his death from a drug overdose at thirty, as well as the author’s own recovery from substance abuse.

  • ADDED

    Aard-vark to Axolotl: Pictures From my Grandfather’s Dictionary by: Karen Donovan

    Karen Donovan’s Aard-vark to Axolotl, an eclectic series of tiny stories and prose poems, is based on a set of illustrations from the pages of her grandfather’s 1925 Webster’s New International Dictionary. The author collected pictures of plants and animals, diagrams and devices, and dozens of other charmingly quirky objects and created a new narrative context for each one. Sometimes sneaky mysterious, sometimes downright weird, these small poetic stories work on the reader like alternative definitions for items drawn from a cabinet of curiosities.

    View all books from Etruscan Press by Karen Donovan

  • ADDED

    All the Difference by Patricia Horvath

    All the Difference is a captivating account of the author’s transformation from a visibly disabled young woman to someone who could, abruptly, “pass” for able-bodied. In prose that is searing and humorous Patricia Horvath details her experiences with bracing and spinal fusion, as she considers the literature of physical transformation and how folk and fairy tales shape our attitudes towards the disabled.

  • ADDED

    An Archaeology of Yearning by Bruce Mills

    An Archaeology of Yearning explores a father’s effort to understand a family landscape altered by autism.  Ultimately, however, the book is not about autism; it is about the central role of storytelling in sustaining human connections and the power of shared desires in embracing difference.

  • ADDED

    Areas of Fog by Will Dowd

    Will Dowd takes us on a whimsical journey through one year of New England weather in this engaging collection of essays. As unpredictable as its subject, Areas of Fog combines wit and poetry with humor and erudition. A fun, breezy, and discursive read, it is an intellectual game that exposes the artificiality of genres.

    Award

    2017 — Mass Book Award

  • ADDED

    Art Into Life: The Craft of Literary Biography by Frederick R. Karl

    Art Into Life is a collection of essays by the late Frederick R. Karl that showcases his experience and advice for writing literary biographies. Karl is best known for his biographies of Franz Kafka, George Eliot, William Faulkner, and Joseph Conrad. Part memoir, part detective story, part literary exegesis, part psychological exploration, this comprehensive collection of essays remains free of critical or theoretical jargon. Whether he’s writing about Conrad’s suicide attempt, Faulkner’s drinking bouts, Kafka’s maternal bond, or George Eliot’s love life, Karl never wavers from his focus on individual experience shaping modern art.

  • ADDED

    As Easy As Lying: Essays on Poetry by H. L. Hix

    Accessible, erudite, and ebullient, these essays delve into the workings of the poetic mind and offer incisive assessments of contemporary American poets and poetics. Hix not only maps the landscape, he reshapes it: taking on nabobs like John Ashbery (“Every age adores a few poets in whose work posterity maintains no interest”) and presenting such disparate figures as Charles Bernstein and Dana Goia in new light, discovering the missing link between the Neo-Formal and the Post-Modern. As Easy As Lying is the best book on Modern American poetry since
    Robert Hass’s Twentieth Century Pleasures.

    “Hix turns out keen metrics at once playful and soulful, suggesting that there may still be room for a philosophical modernist come lately.”—Harvard Review

  • ADDED

    Bestiality of the Involved by Spring Ulmer

    What does it mean to want to become a mother as children around the world die of treatable diseases, are killed by bomb or bullet, are held in cages? In Bestiality of the Involved, Spring Ulmer lives this question out loud, refusing any easy answer.

  • ADDED

    Body of a Dancer by Renee E. D’Aoust

    In a memoir Lance Olsen calls “fascinating, horrifying, unfalteringly honest,” award-winning writer Renee E. D’Aoust draws from her experiences as a modern dancer in New York City during the nineties. Trained at the prestigious Martha Graham Center, D’Aoust intertwines accounts of her own and other dancers’ lives with essays on modern dance history. Her luminous prose spotlights this passionate, often brutal world. Scarred, strained, and tough, bearing witness to the discipline demanded by the art form, Body of a Dancer provides a powerful, acidly comic record of what it is to love, and eventually leave, a life centered on dance.

    “Body of a Dancer fills a void in the dance literature that has existed for far too long. . . As D’Aoust reveals in her wonderful memoir, the ‘Body of a Dancer’ is also shaped by an entire life led both inside and outside the studio.”
    —Ballet-Dance Magazine

    “Fascinating, horrifying, unfalteringly honest, Renée E. D’Aoust’s Body of a Dancer is a remarkably clear-eyed descent into New York’s surreal world of modern dance peopled by the obsessed, dispossessed, sexy, suicidal, brutal, broke, and absurd, where piercing self-doubt and ambition give way to luminous instants of transcendence, and where the body is a site of pain and beauty and discipline and joy, a home you can never fully inhabit and never fully leave.”
    —Lance Olsen, author of Head in Flames

    Award

    2011 Finalist – Foreword Review Book of the Year Award

  • ADDED

    Cannot Stay by Kevin Oderman

    This is a book of journeys, but it is not a guidebook.

    In twelve essays, Cannot Stay delves into why we leave our front porch in the first place. It speaks to the experience of travel, to what it means to shake loose of your identity and stuff all you need in a worn daypack. Cannot Stay bears witness to how travel reawakens us to the world by revealing the strange in the familiar and the familiar in the strange.

    Available: July 2015
    6X9, 238 pp.

    eBook Available

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2020 Book Releases Catalog

2020 Book Releases Catalog

Bearing Imagination – Outreach

Enjoy our latest video "Bearing Imagination - Outreach" which describes Etruscan's mission and continued literary efforts, funded by grants and donations, including the Ohio Arts Council.

Laurie Jean Cannady – A Reading from Crave: Sojourn of a Hungry Soul

Visit “At Length” to Read About Their Latest Feature

"At Length", an online journal, has just released a chapter from To Banquet with the Ethiopians: A Memoir of Life Before the Alphabet (forthcoming from Broadstone).

Click Here to Read More »

Etruscan Co-Founder Receives Governor’s Award

Etruscan Co-Founder Receives Governor's Award
See the video of Etruscan Co-Founder receiving the Ohio Governor's Award here.

Out of Our Minds with H. L. Hix

Out of Our Minds with H. L. Hix
H. L. Hix appeared on KKUP's Out of Our Minds podcast. Listen to the podcast here »

WVIA Interview With Tim Seibles

WVIA Interview With Tim Seibles
Tim Seibles was interviewed on WVIA Radio ArtScene with Erika Funke.
Listen to the podcast here »

WVIA Interview with Phil Brady

WVIA Interview with Phil Brady
The Etruscan Press Executive Director, Phil Brady, was interviewed on WVIA Radio ArtScene with Erika Funke.
Listen to the podcast here »

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