Debra Marquart The Horizontal World--News |
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The Horizontal World:
Growing Up Wild in
the Middle of Nowhere
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"Farmers do not mean to be so possessive; they're just punctuated
that way. And farmer's daughters must struggle against the powerful apostrophes of their fathers."
--The Horizontal World:
Growing Up Wild in the Middle of Nowhere Links to Reviews
New York Times Book Review: Sunday, July 30, 2006: "Young at Heartland." Review by Julia Scheeres. Chicago Tribune: Sunday, July 23, 2006.
"Author's Love is at Emotional Heart of Book." Review by Beth Kephart.
The Book Vault, Oskaloosa, IA: August 3, 2006.
Review by Nancy Simpson.
Germans from Russia Heritage Collection, North Dakota State
University Library. July 29, 2006. Review by Edna Boardman.
Boston Globe: "Short Takes." Sunday,
August 6, 2006. Review by Barbara Fisher.
New York Times Book Review, "Editors' Choice" Selection. August 20, 2006. The Des Moines Register. "Marquart Goes Home Again In New Memoir." August 18, 2006. Reviewed by John Domini. "Live from Prairie Lights" Reading. Podcast on WSUI-FM. Prairie Lights Bookstore, Iowa City, IA. 31 August 2006. "Writer Fled N.D., But She Can't Flee Past." Argus Leader,
Sioux Falls, SD. Review by Jill Callison. 9 Sept. 2006.
"Napoleon, ND Native Will Sign Books Sunday at Little Professor."
Aberdeen News, Aberdeen, SD. Article/Review by Gretchen Mayer. 15 Sept. 2006.
"There's No Place Like Flyover Land." Minneapolis Star Tribune. Review by Katy Read. 26 Sept. 2006. "Itching to Get Out." Chicago Sun-Times. Review by Katy Read. 1 Oct. 2006. "Wisconsin, Nebraska, Jane Austen in Bath Guides." The Chicago Tribune. Review by June Sawyers. 22 October 2006. "Discoveries." Los Angeles Times. Review by Susan Salter Reynolds. 12 Nov. 2006. Whatzup. Leisure Time Weekly for Northeast Indiana.
Review by Evan Gillespie. 16 Nov. 2006
"A Familiar Wildness." Haute Dish: The Arts and Letters Magazine of Metropolitan State University. Review by Ellen Rice. Spring 2007. "Review of The Horizontal World." Brevity Book Review. February, 2007. Review by Todd Davis. "Vivid Bloom in a Dry Place" The Iowa Source: Iowa's Enlightening Magazine. Review by Thomas Dean. Spring 2007. "American Ways of Growing Up." The Washington Post 5 August, 2007. Review. "Paperback Row" New York Times Book Review 12 August 2007. Review. "What's Carla Reading?" Offenberger.com. Review by Carla Offenberger. 16 October 2007. Coal Hill Review, review of The Horizontal World.
June 2011.
"Chores" (excerpt from The Horizontal World). Orion Magazine, July/August 2006 |
Awards
Winner, PEN USA 2007 Creative Nonfiction Award Winner, Elle Magazine's "Elle Lettres" Award, August 2006 Honorable Mention, Elle Magazine's "Grand Prix, 2006" Finalist, Society of Midland Authors, 2007 Nonfiction Award Radio Interviews "On Point," National Public Radio Interview with Tom Ashbrook. 8 August, 2006. "Growing up in the Middle of Nowhere." Weekend America. American Public Radio. 7 July 2007. Advance Praise |
Early Reviews From Publishers Weekly
From the first word, Marquart (The Hunger Bone) makes clear that she's got some reckoning to do with her home place, damning horny farmboys and the "seeds" they plant in the first paragraph of this rich memoir of growing up on a North Dakota farm. She got out as soon as she could, looking back only years later when her father's death pulls her home. Marquart explores her childhood as a victim of endless chores (wryly noting the word chores is "always plural") and isolation that was unbearable, especially for a contact-hungry teen. Everything Marquart touches gains light and color, from the monotony of the work and the tactics she developed to avoid it to the land itself and the untold price her foremothers paid to settle it. All of her narrative's wanderlust, however, brings her back to her father, sowing insight into his respect for her pursuit of a different life and her growing connection to how he lived his. (Aug.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information. From Library Journal The Horizontal World reveals the depth of Marquart's (The Hunger Bone: Rock & Roll Stories) connection to her family's multigenerational farm in North Dakota through a series of stories, each of them based on a powerful personal recollection. The stories most accessible to the reader are the ones in which Marquart's character is brought strongly into the forefront, either as a recalcitrant kid, a wild teenager, or a mulish adult. Flashes of who she is now-a lyrical poet, writer, and teacher-are also apparent. Additionally, the book serves to chronicle the places that have rooted, and uprooted, the Marquart clan, and in this respect, works well as a memoir. When presented alone, the scientific and historical information used to offset Marquart's personal narrative seems too studied. When elaborated upon-i.e., the consequences and context of bare-bones facts further imagined-they work to enrich this beautiful memoir. Recommended for public and academic libraries.-Maria Kochis, California State Univ. Lib., Sacramento Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information. From Barnes & Noble Editors No matter how far we wander, it's an indisputable fact that who we are is intimately connected to where we're from. In this splendid family memoir, Debra Marquart explores the complicated geography of home and the strange symbiosis between place and identity. Raised on her family's North Dakota farm, a place she loathed for its unending drudgery, Marquart couldn't wait to shake the dust of the Great Plains from her feet. Yet, years later, when she returned for her beloved father's funeral, she rediscovered a connection to the land and to her family's pioneer history that surprised her mightily. For all of us who have stood poised between the need to escape and the desire to return home, this poignant and beautifully written book rings singularly true. |
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