Devotion by Smith, Patti
£8.99Author: Smith, Patti
Autobiography: literary
Published on 27 September 2018 by YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS in the United States as part of ‘the Why I Write’ series.
Paperback | 120 pages, 22 b-w illus.
121 x 177 x 9 | 124g
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Paperback | 120 pages, 22 b-w illus.
121 x 177 x 9 | 124g

Paperback | 96 pages
139 x 215 x 6 | 88g

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* LONGLISTED FOR THE 2023 REPUBLIC OF CONSCIOUSNESS PRIZE *
A stylistically dazzling novel about objects, people, and the forces and seams between them.
Of course, each thing has its own sides to every story.
In a dark and crooked lane in an unnamed city where it never ceases to snow, a small white box falls from a coat pocket. It is made of paper strips woven tightly together; there is no apparent way to open it without destroying it.
What compels a passing witness, a self-described anthrophobe not inclined to engage with other people, to pick up the box and chase after the stranger who dropped it?
The Box follows an impenetrable rectangle as it changes hands in a collapsing metropolis, causing confluences, conflicts, rifts, and disasters. Different narrators, each with a distinctive voice, give secondhand accounts of decisive moments in the box’s life. From the anthrophobe to a newly hired curator of a renowned art collection, from a couple who own an antiquarian bookshop to a hotel bartender hiding from a terrible past, the storytellers repeat rumors and rely on faulty memories, grasping at something that continually escapes them.
Haunting their recollections is one mysterious woman who, convinced of the box’s good or evil powers, pursues it with deadly desperation.
In this mesmerizing, intricately constructed puzzle of a novel, Mandy-Suzanne Wong challenges our understanding of subjects and objects, of cause and effect. Is it only humans who have agency? What is or isn’t animate? What do we value and what do we discard?

Daughter of Mother-of-Pearl collects Mandy-Suzanne Wong’s reminiscences, dreams, investigations, and experiments in being with small invertebrates whose vulnerability and creativity inspire radical reimaginings of Earthlinghood. In graceful linked essays, Wong wonders: What constitutes a self if a starfish can twist off one of his arms to explore the seafloor on its own? What is an animate being, considering a living snail is also an inanimate shell? What does love mean to a jellyfish, or time to an octopus? Her encounters with nonhuman animals reshape her language into different forms from collage to fragments, and prompt uncommon engagements with various texts. She looks behind words like “invasive” and “endling” in scientific articles and in poetry, questions natural selection with a bubble-rafting snail, sees the bivalve in Dostoevsky, and studies a speculative treatise about a “vampire squid from hell.”Personal yet de-personal, at once tender and challenging, Wong’s essays invite humans to rethink our relationship to other beings.
Instead of capturing and destroying them, using them as resources or reflections of ourselves, she asks us only to coexist with them—to cherish them although, and because, we cannot fully know them.

Hardback | 256 pages
225 x 314 x 28 | 1706g

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129 x 199 x 5 | 84g

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140 x 217 x 12 | 150g

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131 x 198 x 39 | 460g

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209 x 135 x 9 | 116g

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210 x 136 x 11 | 126g

Hardback | 144 pages, Illustrations
161 x 241 x 19 | 354g

Paperback | 40 pages
250 x 196 x 3 | 154g

Paperback | 136 pages
200 x 270 x 11 | 494g