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Homesick
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
18 posts | 11 read | 12 to read
The coming of age story of an award-winning translator, HOMESICK is about learning to love language in its many forms, healing through words and the promises and perils of empathy and sisterhood. Sisters Amy and Zoe grow up in Oklahoma where they are homeschooled for an unexpected reason: Zoe suffers from debilitating and mysterious seizures, spending her childhood in hospitals as she undergoes surgeries. Meanwhile, Amy flourishes intellectually, showing an innate ability to glean a world beyond the troubles in her home life, exploring that world through languages first. Amy's first love appears in the form of her Russian tutor Sasha, but when she enters university at the age of 15her life changes drastically and with tragic results.
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bthegood
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Pickpick

A memoir, author uses names of Amy (MC) and Zoe - it is about their relationship, from Amy's POV. I enjoyed the writing style - each part of the story is written as Amy would have perceived it at that age. I enjoyed the photography interspersed throughout the story. I did feel part of the story was hidden between the lines, just out of reach. Overall, a well written story.
Goal for #JubilantJuly is #BookSpinBingo
Make a great day everyone 🙂

Andrew65 Almost there 👏👏👏 1y
32 likes1 comment
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bthegood
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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#JubilantJuly goals are to get the #BookSpinBingo -
Still working on the #AlphabeticalBingo (giving myself all year to get that one covered!)

Thanks everyone for hosting everything - @Andrew65 @TheAromaofBooks @Clwojick

Make a great day everyone 🌞

TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!!! 1y
Andrew65 Great to have you with us, good luck 😁 1y
30 likes2 comments
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KatieB
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Pickpick

A soft pick for me - ⭐️⭐️⭐️. After my last pan, this was a welcome improvement. I thought the writing was good but the chapters were short (1-4 pages) which, although it made for a fast read, meant that it was difficult to really stay immersed in the story. My second #14books14weeks book

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squirrelbrain
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Pickpick

Hmmm, I just don‘t know with this book, from the #womensprize long list. It is a light pick but I think I read too much about the two different versions of this book so I went in not expecting much, and didn‘t get much as a result.

The narrative felt too choppy for me with what felt like great chunks missing. I wish I‘d have read the other (longer?) version, but then I‘m not that interested to try having read this one. 🤷‍♀️

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ChaoticMissAdventures
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Hoping to make it through all of these before the April 26th short list announcement!
Tackling Demon Copperhead, The Bandit Queens and starting Fire Rush this weekend.
So far my personal favorite is the tagged.

jlhammar Wow, great progress! 2y
21 likes1 comment
review
jlhammar
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Pickpick

A poignant coming-of-age story about a passion for language (Croft is an award-winning translator) and the special bond between sisters. The US edition that I read (pictured) includes photographs between vignettes. I loved the mixed-media format. I felt it enriched the narrative and made for a unique reading experience. Only my fourth from the #WomensPrize longlist, but I won‘t be surprised if it makes my personal shortlist.

ChaoticMissAdventures I feel the same! Love the media mix and I am hoping it makes the short list. 2y
squirrelbrain Interesting - I read the ‘other‘ version and it didn‘t quite hang together for me, and there wasn‘t much about language at all. 🤔 2y
jlhammar @squirrelbrain Oh, that is interesting. The letter excerpts under each photo focus on language quite a bit such as “Words are worlds, with capacities enough for polar opposites, like left, meaning remaining and departed, or oversight, both supervision and failure to see.” 2y
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jlhammar
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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“Remember when I used to make you practice saying words?”

I have a very good feeling about this one.

#FirstLineFridays #WomensPrize

ChaoticMissAdventures I really loved this one. Though I am still confused about how it qualifies for the prize. In the states it is classified as a memoir. 2y
jlhammar @ChaoticMissAdventures I heard it may have been reworked slightly for the Charco press edition (which is the one marketed as fiction). I'd definitely love to hear more about why though. Either way, I'm here for it! The blurred lines of autofiction fascinate me. Anything involving memory is so tricky anyhow. And sometimes I think you can get to the truth of something more when some liberties are taken. So interesting. 2y
ChaoticMissAdventures @jlhammar agreed! In the acknowledgement she thanks a brother who was not in the story. The whole thing is just super creative. I loved the use of photos and sketches throughout. 2y
47 likes3 comments
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Hooked_on_books
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Pickpick

This is a book that seems to be deeply exploring the relationship of a child to her sister and the deep ramifications of a failure by her family to attend to her social development. Judging just the text, I found it affecting, but I‘m very confused by how a memoir contains people with completely different names from the author. This screams for an author‘s note. Pick for the text alone, something else entirely for the confusion.

squirrelbrain I think a few people are confused by this. And if it‘s a memoir how come it‘s on the Women‘s Prize for Fiction long list? (edited) 2y
Hooked_on_books @squirrelbrain Another excellent question! I actually did some searching for interviews with her, but all they talking about was translation. They would mention this book but then not say anything about her choices writing it. I found it very distracting. 2y
jlhammar This is towards the top of my #WomensPrize to-read stack. Looking forward to it! 2y
Hooked_on_books @IndoorDame Thanks! This is one of the articles I skimmed through when trying to find more of her talking about some of these choices, but she doesn‘t quite address the questions I have. Too bad I don‘t have her phone number! 😆 2y
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Suet624
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Mehso-so

So… sadly, I think the fact that I had both the audio and ebook versions to compare each to the other I was completely befuddled and couldn‘t settle into this book. What was true, what wasn‘t … each version missed significant parts of the other‘s story. I think I need to find the paper version and try again. For now it‘s a so-so for me.

squirrelbrain Oh no, that‘s a shame. I can get the print on Scribd, and the audio on Libby but not for another month. I may just go with the print and stick to it, so I don‘t get muddled. 2y
Suet624 @squirrelbrain Yeah, I don't even know how to advise you on this. They really are different from one another. I know that the print version has photos that didn't even show up on the ebook on Hoopla. I guess there is a US version and a Euro version? It's all so confusing to me. 2y
squirrelbrain I just looked at the cover on the Women‘s Prize website, and it‘s the same as the print copy on Scribd (dark grey with a chalk house drawn on it) so I think I‘ll go with that version. The audio copy I had reserved has the same cover as yours. 2y
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Suet624 @squirrelbrain 🤞🏻🙏🏻👍🏻 I hope it is enjoyable. I think going with just one option would be best. 2y
Hooked_on_books I just finished this last night and the entire time I was reading I was trying to figure out how on earth a memoir written by someone named Jennifer could be written in the third person with characters named Amy and Zoe. I‘m going to try to separate that out in my review and just judge the text, but I really wish she had included an author‘s note. 2y
Suet624 @Hooked_on_books Your comment made me chuckle. Yes! The more I think about this book the more annoyed I get about it. 😂 2y
50 likes6 comments
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ChaoticMissAdventures
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Pickpick

#20in4 #readathon #womensprizelonglist
Wow.
Every line in this is immaculate.
This is my 3rd WP long list read and by far my favorite.
Holy inventive, a mixture of fiction, memoir, art - poetry, sketches, photography. I have not read anything quite like this before. I really loved this experience even with the very heavy topics addressed (tw suicide, date rape, child illness, cancer, probably more)
I hope this is shortlisted, it deserves it.

jlhammar Awesome! Can't wait to get started! 2y
dabbe Da sweetest kitty is tuckered out! ❣️🐾❣️ 2y
30 likes2 comments
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ChaoticMissAdventures
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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#firstlinefridat @ShyBookOwl

"Their mom gets them ready for all the possible disasters that might ever occur so she reads aloud the headlines from the Tulsa World at breakfast while Amy and Zoe eat their Cheerios."

#WomensPrizeLongList

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ChaoticMissAdventures
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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"I guess I've thrown myself into travels as though maneuvering through time as well as space, and flouting gravity."

I am really enjoying this Women's Prize long list book. Even if I am confused how it even qualifies - in the US it is listed as a memoir and as a "nonfiction creative" writing.
The style is different, choppy chapters mixed with photos and drawings, and poetic passages. It is a strongly creative book that might polarize.

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Suet624
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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I am so confused & frustrated by Hoopla right now. I‘m just at the beginning of this book. What I‘m finding is the ebook version has left out at least one important chapter in which a main character is hurt which I assume is an important element of the story. From what I can tell it then leaves out the next two chapters. The audio version of the book leaves out paragraphs from the first chapter. I can‘t tell which one to actually use. So beware!

Deblovestoread That‘s frustrating! I‘m currently listening with about an hour to go and think it is all there. 2y
Suet624 @Deblovestoread good to know. I think I‘ll listen and check in occasionally with the ebook to see if the audio left anything out. I trust the audiobook just a bit more. 2y
jlhammar I think I remember Eric Karl Anderson (Lonesome Reader) mentioning in his Women‘s Prize longlist reaction video that this book may have been rewritten slightly from the US version (your audio, I think?) where it was marketed as memoir to the Charco Press edition (your e-book on the left?) where it is marketed as fiction. I wonder if that could explain the difference? 2y
Suet624 @jlhammar Wow! Thank you. I never would have considered that as a possibility. So you‘re saying I shouldn‘t blame hoopla? 😂🤪 2y
squirrelbrain That‘s interesting @jlhammar - I have the left hand version on Scribd. I wonder if I can find an audio instead…. 2y
46 likes5 comments
review
Cinfhen
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Pickpick

A blending of genres, mediums and languages, Jennifer Croft pens her coming of age in an auto-fiction visually styled novel. It‘s sad and unsettling but easy to appreciate and get through. Croft is an award winning translator who‘s worked with many prominent authors, this is her debut. #WomensPrizeLongList23 I was able to borrow both audio and e-book from #Hoopla

squirrelbrain You‘re whizzing through the list! 2y
Cinfhen I know @squirrelbrain I read 4 this week, I‘ve read 2 prior to the announcement and I have 2 more on the go!!! That‘s half the longlist 🙌🏻 2y
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squirrelbrain Amazing! 2y
ashw21 Can‘t wait to read this !! 2y
Cinfhen @ashw21 it‘s short but really impactful- this is a case where I‘d say print form is probably better than audio @squirrelbrain Im halfway through this one and it‘s also really good 2y
Cinfhen Memphis on audio is GREAT 😊 2y
Lizpixie 🙌🎉😘 2y
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Cinfhen
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Thanks for putting this on my #ReadersRadar @TheKidUpstairs I borrowed both the audio and e-book from #Hoopla because I realized I NEEDED to see the photos that accompany the text. A story/ memoir by Jennifer Croft who is a literary translator. Croft replays her childhood experiences growing up with a beloved younger sister who is diagnosed with a brain tumor. There‘s a sense of melancholy and urgency on every page. #WomensPrizeLongList23

TheKidUpstairs Happy to spread the word for this one! It looks like we're swapping reads - my hold for Dog of the North just came in. 2y
Cinfhen Dog is whacked in a good way @TheKidUpstairs I think you‘ll like it 2y
TheKidUpstairs @Cinfhen "whacked in a good way" is totally my wheelhouse! 2y
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Suet624 Thanks for mentioning this was on Hoopla. Just managed to download it. 2y
Suet624 Did you notice that the audio on Hoopla is abridged? It doesn‘t say it is but if you look at the ebook on Hoopla it‘s quite different. 2y
Cinfhen No @Suet624 I didn‘t realize !! I did half audio / half ebook but I didn‘t notice the discrepancy 🤦🏼‍♀️ 2y
58 likes6 comments
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TheKidUpstairs
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Pickpick

TW: suicide, suicide attempt, self-harm, rape, childhood illness

How do you translate your life into a fictional body? Croft plays with genre, blurring the lines between fiction and truth; and form, combining short chapters with photos from her childhood and captions that question the limits of language to translate feelings and memory. The result is beautifully readable, thoughtful, and effective.

#WomensPrizeLonglist23

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TheKidUpstairs
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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"In Ancient Greece a clue was just a skein of yarn until enough mythical figures unraveled their ways out of mazes."

#WomensPrize2023 #WomensPrizeLonglist

BarbaraBB Very curious about this one 2y
Chelsea.Poole That is an awesome cover. I don‘t know what to think about this with the “memoir” subtitle. Is it working for you? 2y
TheKidUpstairs @Chelsea.Poole the cover is awesome, I love it too. It's totally working for me. It definitely reads more like a novel than a memoir. Names have been changed and it's in this person perspective rather than first (with the exception of photo captions/ commentary). Very engaging and well written, and I really like how she plays with form and genre. 2y
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TheKidUpstairs @Chelsea.Poole (that should say third person perspective, not this person... typing too fast for my own good) 2y
TheKidUpstairs @BarbaraBB I'm loving it so far. Totally engaging from the start. I really like when an author can play around with the expectations of form and genre, but still deliver something that is highly readable. And this, so far, seems to be hitting that mark beautifully. 2y
Chelsea.Poole Thank you! I like what you said in your previous comment about experimentation but still readable. Often I find those types too “out there” so I look forward to getting around to this! 2y
BarbaraBB That sounds as good as I hoped for. Stacked. 2y
Leniverse The UK edition doesn't have the Memoir subtitle, and has apparently been rewritten, and the US memoir has been rewritten from a blog, which was rewritten from an illustrated short story in Spanish. If I have managed to track that correctly. 😵‍💫🤯 So I really wonder how different the UK release is to the older US one. 2y
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ReadingEnvy
Homesick | Jennifer Croft
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Pickpick

I thought it would be interesting to change it up for #WITmonth and read an award-winning translator's memoir. I will call it memoir adjacent, because she calls the girl named after her a different name, and uses photography taken by others but credited to the protagonist, but many other details come from her life.↘️

ReadingEnvy This is not a translated work, but it was written first in Spanish. From her website: "The book was written in Spanish first, as a novel called Serpientes y escaleras, and then as a memoir in English, called Homesick. Neither the Spanish nor the English is a translation." Fascinating. 3y
ReadingEnvy I loved the story of the sisters, the obsession with language, the use of brief entries and many photographs to tell this story. I wished for more of the author, as it felt in some ways that renaming and the form were keeping us at arms' length. It's pretty impressive that Jennifer Croft translates from Polish, Russian, and Spanish. She is this month's MVP. 3y
Centique How incredible to write it seperately as a novel and then a memoir in different languages. It would be so interesting to read both and compare. What amazing talent 🙌 3y
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