Who? Where?
“Tin House expands the boundaries of what great literature can do. Publisher of award-winning books of literary fiction, nonfiction, and poetry; home to a renowned workshop and seminar series; and partner of a critically acclaimed podcast, Tin House champions writing that is artful, dynamic, and original. We are proud to publish and promote writers who speak to a wide range of experience, and lend context and nuance to their examination of our world.“(From Webpage)
Established in Portland, Oregon (western coast of the United States) and now distributed via Norton (NYC).
First encounter?
Their amazing magazine, which was like Granta and Brick combined, until it closed in 2018 and later ceased publishing online as well.
Other Tin House Reading:
The World Split Open by the Literary Arts Collective (2014)
Ruth Gilligan’s The Butchers’ Blessing (2020)
Eman Quotah’s Bride of the Sea (2021)
Elissa Washuta’s White Magic (2021)
RECENT READ: Daisy Hernández’s The Kissing Bug (2021)
Nearly six million people are currently infected with the “kissing bug”, a parasite mostly undetected, with 20-30% of the infected individuals coping with cardiac problems and more than 10,000 people dying from it each year; the doctor who discovered it in 1909 was nominated for the Nobel Prize twice, but the WHO still classifies Chagas as a “neglected tropical disease.”
Daisy Hernández writes in clear-eyed and propulsive prose; she begins with a personal story that hooked me in two pages, moves to a broader understanding of the organism, and shifts finally to consideration of other families affected by the infection.
Her work recalls Harriet Washington’s writing on environmentalism racism (and, similarly, there’s extensive back-end material, for those who wish to investigate further, admire her scholarship). She is adept at drawing connections and exposing systemic injustices; she is equally adept at describing familial connections (she first met her aunt, who suffered and died from Chagas, when she was only eight months old) and describing ordinary, everyday scenes.
Deft asides (musings on language, Darwin’s encounters with the creatures, wrestling, mummies, unauthorized testing, built-in bookshelves, and make-shift clinics in church basements, for instance) fuel the quest-styled narrative.
Short chapters, further segmented yet again—combined with the story’s inherent urgency—make the narrative un-put-down-able.
“We do not consistently eradicate infectious diseases—we contain them to communities of color, to the poor, to the homeless, to people in this Second America.”
This sounds good! I *do* like books with a medical/health theme, and the social aspect makes it even better.
It would probably be the perfect storm for you then. Perhaps a candidate for ILL? Lucky bug.
I’ve never read anything from Tin House, but I’ve always viewed them as a very ‘respectable’ press, in the sense that if you are in the know, you know they publish great books, and they’ve always had a great reputation. Maybe that’s just because I missed whether they were a magazine or a publishing house, but I always knew they were thought of very highly. And I’ve never heard of the kissing disease so this sounds like a fascinating read!
It’s quite a gripping story, all in all. But they’ve also got a lot of fascinating fiction that you might enjoy even more!
I am squeamish about reading anything medical, so I’ll probably pass on this one, but I definitely want to read White Magic.
I don’t think it would be considered a medical memoir (but I did recommend it to Rebecca LOL)–I avoid reading about declining health and hospital scenes, for instance–it’s much more about the social side of things.
“We do not consistently eradicate infectious diseases—we contain them to communities of color, to the poor, to the homeless, to people in this Second America.” .. and more generally to people in the third world.
I know it’s not new to say capitalism is short-sighted, but how ridiculous is a system that doesn’t allocate money to fighting diseases in the incubators where they begin or go to mutate.
I suppose if you’re part of the “First” group, in the “First America”, the population that remains untouched and invulnerable, it just doesn’t even figure into the equation of short- or far-sighted: it’s just not relevant.
Its shortsightedness costs ‘First America’ a lot of money. eg. in today’s paper (Melbourne Age): Spend billions, save trillions: it’s in rich nations’ self-interest to vaccinate the world
Perhaps in nations’ interests, in terms of their broader population, but how will we ever see that set of priorities reflected in the the leadership. Maybe I’m being too cynical, but I don’t see how the elite is threatened in the situation, in a meaningful way, when at a certain point, they simply cannot spend all the profits they’re accruing. I think I need to go and watch some baby animal videos to restore my faith in…oh, baby animals, I guess.
I’m really enjoying your series on indie presses. And like Emma, I’ve learnt something new!
Thank you for reading and sharing in my enthusiasm!
Tin House is a great press! I do miss their online magazine. This sounds like a really good and important book. I am increasingly angry with how we handle healthcare in this world and who is given medicine, what kind, for how much, and who has access. The developed world is hoarding all the COVID vaccines while poorer countries continue to suffer. So infuriating. Thanks for the reminder about Tin House and the review of this book!
It was great to read such a fine example of their non-fiction, and Washuta’s memoir was interesting too, to remind me that there’s more to them than just fiction! If you haven’t read Harriet Washington, I bet you’d appreciate her angle: very accessible but lots of footnotes and appendices if you wish to follow up more (which as an American might apply more to you than to me, although obviously there are many similarities between the U.S. and Canada too).
I’d never heard of this disease, so I’ll go to bed knowing something new tonight!
Thanks.
It’s definitely an eye-opening read!
The Kissing Bug sounds fascinating, never heard of that disease. Though, I’m not at all keen on reading about medical stuff, I’m afraid. It must be especially eye opening to read a book like this during a pandemic.
Paradoxically, it can be bizarrely reassuring to realise that there are all kinds of threats that we’re not hearing about in the news right now!
Love an indie that promotes the original! 😀
Absolutely!