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"In this poetic, introspective memoir, Kenny Fries illustrates his intersecting identities as gay, Jewish, and disabled. While learning about the history of his body through medical records and his physical scars, Fries discovers just how deeply the memories and psychic scars run. As he reflects on his relationships with his family, his compassionate doctor, the brother who resented his disability, and the men who taught him to love, he confronts the challenges of his life. Body, Remember is a story about connection, a redemptive and passionate testimony to one man's search for the sources of identity and difference."--Jacket.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Gay men, Leg, American Authors, Patients, Authors, American, Abnormalities, Gays with disabilities, Biography, Gay poets, Jewish authors, Jews, People with disabilities, Identity, Authors with disabilities, Authors, biography, People with disabilities, biographyPeople
Kenny Fries (1960-)Places
United StatesTimes
20th centuryEdition | Availability |
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Work Description
Body, Remember is a deeply affecting memoir that revolves around a mystery: at age 35, poet Kenny Fries wanted to discover what could be learned about the history of his body, and the map of physical and psychic scars with which he had lived since infancy. He began only with a description his father had given him.
At his birth "each leg was no bigger than his finger; each leg was twisted like a pretzel; each leg had no arch to separate leg from foot; each leg was dimpled above what would have been my ankle.".
Fries turned to long-buried medical records, reconstructing a record of his disability just as his body had been reconstructed over countless surgeries. He unearthed family secrets and looked again at the echoing memories of past relationships.
In Body, Remember we meet and come to know intimately Frie's observant Jewish family and neighbors in Brooklyn; his doctor, who broke with colleagues and insisted that he needn't undergo amputation of both his legs; the brother who resented his disabled sibling; the men who awakened Frie's sexuality and initiated him into a lifelong questioning of the meaning of beauty; and the community of disabled people who prompted some difficult questions about our world's demands on human life and physical being.
Body, Remember ultimately tells a story about connection. This memoir is a redemptive and passionate testimony to one man's search for the sources of identity and difference.
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September 20, 2024 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
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April 27, 2011 | Edited by OCLC Bot | Added OCLC numbers. |
April 1, 2008 | Created by an anonymous user | Imported from Scriblio MARC record |