Behold, edits. Piles of edits, neatly piled and edited on my studio floor.
Glamor. This is a picture of what would turn into what the publishing industry calls, painfully, "foul matter."
Invisible Sisters: A Memoir
Invisible Sisters is Jessica Handler’s powerful tale of coming of age as the daughter of progressive Jewish parents who moved to Atlanta to participate in the social-justice movement of the 1960s, the healthy sister living in the shadow of her siblings’ illnesses, a daughter in a family torn apart by impossible circumstances, and as a young woman struggling to redefine herself after her sisters’ deaths.
Handler’s baby sister had been born with Kostmann’s Syndrome—a congenital blood disorder so rare that it appears in one in every two million births—and she and her family grew accustomed to the constantly shifting demands of illness. But when her younger sister was diagnosed with leukemia at age six, Jessica’s world, and her family, began to unravel. By the age of nine, Jessica Handler had begun to introduce herself as the “well sibling” and to consider the very real possibility that one day, she would be the only one left.
Invisible Sisters is the award-winning memoir of the unforgettable journey that she and her family faced.
Handler’s baby sister had been born with Kostmann’s Syndrome—a congenital blood disorder so rare that it appears in one in every two million births—and she and her family grew accustomed to the constantly shifting demands of illness. But when her younger sister was diagnosed with leukemia at age six, Jessica’s world, and her family, began to unravel. By the age of nine, Jessica Handler had begun to introduce herself as the “well sibling” and to consider the very real possibility that one day, she would be the only one left.
Invisible Sisters is the award-winning memoir of the unforgettable journey that she and her family faced.

1 comment:
I finally archived all the versions of the poetry manuscript of "Render" yesterday. It went through three different titles and four sequences before I arrived at the one being published next spring. It's always amazing to look back at edits and see where you've been.
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