Specimen

Madison Hamill
4.41
76 ratings 16 reviews
A father rollerblading to church in his ministerial robes, a university student in a leotard sprinting through fog, a trespass notice from Pak’nSave, a beautiful unborn goat in a jar . . . In scenarios ranging from the mundane to the surreal, Madison Hamill looks back at her younger selves with a sharp eye. Was she good or evil? Ignorant or enlightened? What parts of herself did she give up in order to forge ahead in school, church, work, and relationships, with a self that made sense to others? With wit and intelligence, these shape-shifting essays probe the ways in which a person’s inner and outer worlds intersect and submit to one another. It is a brilliantly discomfiting, vivid and funny collection in which peace is found in the weirdest moments. ‘I never felt that I was looking at fine writing – only at astonishing writing.’ —Elizabeth Knox.
Genres: NonfictionEssaysContemporary
231 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
41 (54%)
4 star
27 (36%)
3 star
6 (8%)
2 star
2 (3%)
1 star
0 (0%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Madison Hamill