Constellations: Reflections from Life

Author:   Sinéad Gleeson
Publisher:   Ecco Press
ISBN:  

9780358213031


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   24 March 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Constellations: Reflections from Life


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The #1 Irish bestseller and winner of Non-Fiction Book of the Year at the 2019 An Post Irish Book Awards, winner of the 2020 Dalkey Literary Awards, named Best Book of the Year by the Guardian, Observer, Image, Irish Times, New Statesman, and Irish Independent, Sinéad Gleeson's essays chronicle--in crystalline, tender, powerful prose--life in a body as it goes through sickness, health, motherhood, and love of all kinds. ""I have come to think of all the metal in my body as artificial stars, glistening beneath the skin, a constellation of old and new metal. A map, a tracing of connections and a guide to looking at things from different angles."" We treat the body as an afterthought, until it no longer can be. Until the pain or the pleasure is too great. Sinéad Gleeson's life has been marked by terrible illness, including leukemia and debilitating arthritis. As a child, she bathed in the springs of Lourdes, ever hopeful that her body would cooperate, ever looking forward to the day when she could take her body for granted. But just as she turns inward to explore her own pain, and then the marvel of recovery, and then the arrival of her greatest joys--falling in love, becoming a mother--she turns her gaze outward. She delves into history, art, literature, and music, plotting the intimate experience of life in a women's body across a wide-ranging map. From Nick Cave to Taylor Swift, Botticelli to Frida Kahlo, Louisa May Alcott to Lucy Grealy, Constellations is an investigation into the different ways of seeing, both uniquely personal and universal in its resonances. In the tradition of some of our finest life writers, Gleeson explores--in her own spirited, generous voice--the fierceness of being alive. She has written ""a book [that] every woman should read"" (Eimear McBride).

Full Product Details

Author:   Sinéad Gleeson
Publisher:   Ecco Press
Imprint:   Ecco Press
Dimensions:   Width: 13.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 20.10cm
Weight:   0.204kg
ISBN:  

9780358213031


ISBN 10:   0358213037
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   24 March 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

#1 BESTSELLER IN IRELAND Bell-clear and immaculately hewn throughout, Gleeson's voice is also strikingly muscular and dexterous . . . Her voice and what she says with it is everything her body hasn't been -- vigorous, adamantine, assured . . . Powerful registers are struck, and always there is something linking the discussion back to what is for the writer the most tangibly immediate components of her life. This is where she cracks you wide open . . . You'd need a heart of stone to resist these hymns and paeans . . . A book brimming with vitality and sincerity. --Independent (UK) Gleeson is an eloquent storyteller, and the stories are held in delicate balance with the analysis of her world. --Guardian (UK) Sinead Gleeson's essay collection brings together passionate, transcendent essays about bodies and art, ghosts and womanhood, grief and motherhood, and what it's like to live in a body that fails you. Like the perfect title indicates, this is a glistening ensemble of pieces that live on their own but, all together, form a powerful emotional universe. --Elle (UK), Ones to watch in 2019 Outstanding . . . wide-ranging, intimate, and expressive . . . it's clear that Gleeson's insight is hard-won, and that, like the women who inspire her, she has found a way to transmute her experience into something powerful that demands to be heard. --Observer (UK) Gleeson's eye for detail, particularly the absurd or tragic, is dangerously sharp. She is a thoughtful writer who emerges from her illnesses resilient and unbowed. --Times(UK) Dazzling . . . Things are changing, thanks to tireless campaigners like Gleeson. These essays are political and they tell of how a life can be saved several times and lived to the full, despite great pain, despite great obstacles. --Irish Times An eloquent collection of essays on health, parenthood and the brutality of being a woman inhabiting a body. --Harper's Bazaar, Irish writers are taking over literature--These are the seven you need to know about An extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Irish Examiner Gleeson's writing is honest and moving and delves deep into personal experiences of sickness, health and motherhood. --Literary Hub, 8 Recommended Debuts by Irish Women Writers [Gleeson] manages to beautifully weave together the individual with the universal in a way that, if needed, puts definitively to rest the tired idea that women's writing is personal, and therefore not political . . . Her writing has the same effect as a beautifully rendered artwork; you will want to sit and contemplate it. Sentences and ideas are woven together to create an overall effect that is mesmerizing, but with a depth that will mean the ideas presented in this book linger with you. --Image (Ireland) With the publication . . . of Constellations, [Gleeson's] debut collection of essays, her own literary star will be in the ascendant. --Irish Times, Best of Irish: 10 shooting stars of Irish writing [A] collection of memoir, essay, and poetry [that] reads like a novel, like a conversation with a friend, like a confession. Beautiful and important, confirmation, as if we needed it, of the ability of women (and this woman in particular) to overcome the most difficult personal circumstances. --Kit De Waal, for the Guardian, The best books by women of the 21st century Its translucent, engaging prose can easily slip by in a single sitting, so persuasively hypnotic is our narrator . . . An undoubtedly feminist writer, Gleeson writes with great nuance . . . Constellations, along with Emily Pine's Notes to Self and Maggie O'Farrell's I Am, I Am, I Am, succeeds in reclaiming the essay . . . and reinvigorating it as a living and vital thing. --Sunday Business Post [Gleeson's] writing is eclectic and consummately delivered . . . Gleeson excels at combining personal stories with wider themes, and here she looks at everything from her own personal stories of illness, loss, and grief to the lives of famous artists and writers. In a publishing world of bluster and hype, thoughtful and subtle writing like Gleeson's is very welcome. --The Big Issue Sinead Gleeson is a writer with passion and conviction . . . [Her] new book of essays Constellations is a tidal flow of the private and deeply political world of the body. She could be described as one of the foremost feminist voices of Ireland today; an Ireland in which the body, in particular the female body, has become a furtive ground for a new mythic imaginary . . . Gleeson brings a life force to the imaginary of motherhood, love, illness, and death. --RTE, Ireland These brilliant essays read as if Gleeson has made a vow to her readers to illuminate what it means to live in a human body--for better or for worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health--all the days of her life. Come for the dark jokes and existential dread. Stay for the beauty and tenderness. --Jenny Offill, author of Weather, Dept. of Speculation, and others Sinead Gleeson has changed the Irish literary landscape, through her advocacy for the female voice. In Constellations, we finally hear her own voice, and it comes from the blood and bones of her body's history. Sinead Gleeson is an absolute force: if you want to know where passion and tenacity are born, read this book. --Anne Enright, author of The Green Road Sinead Gleeson observes the world with grace and style and dignity. In so doing, she captures the pulse of the wound. A beautiful and important collection of essays. --Colum McCann, author of Let the Great World Spin Sinead Gleeson has written one of those rare things, a wise and compassionate book full of truth and humility. There are universal themes here: love, the strength of women, survival against the odds. Beautiful prose, poetry, and history woven together to make this a must-read and a masterpiece. --Kit de Waal, author of My Name Is Leon Nimbly written, balletic in style, heartfelt, spirited, and thoughtful, Sinead Gleeson's Constellations is a powerful, inspiring gift to readers everywhere. --Jami Attenberg, author of All This Could Be Yours Utterly magnificent. Raw, thought-provoking and galvanizing; this is a book every woman should read. --Eimear McBride, author of A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing Constellations is a truly beautiful book about the tremendous confines of the body, struck through with almost everything else in the universe, from songs to stars. --Sara Baume, author of Spill Simmer Falter Wither Sinead Gleeson's collection of essays is brilliant, yes, but that word is somehow too glittery, too showy. These essays celebrate a resilience that feels hard-won . . . Fierce and defiant . . . With Constellations [Gleeson] steps out into the light, a bright star ready to shine. --Dublin Review of Books My god what an absolutely incredible book . . . It's stunning . . . This is one of those you read every ten years and it changes you. --Evie Wyld, author of All the Birds, Singing Remarkable. --Robert Macfarlane, award-winning author of Landmarks and The Old Way In Constellations, Sinead Gleeson maps the human body and the the human condition in all its triumphs and failures, leaving us with hope and survival. Her writing is startlingly good and fiercely intelligent; her research is forensic and the result is a gift to readers everywhere. --Liz Nugent, author of Skin Deep The most beautiful and brilliant book--gorgeous, furious, powerful, tender, funny, compassionate, and shockingly wise. Sinead Gleeson writes with such dazzling talent and vivid insight. Constellations is one of those rare magical books and I feel truly nourished by it. Absolutely extraordinary and life-enhancing. --Daisy Buchanan, author of How to Be a Grown Up Constellations is an extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Louise O' Neill, author of Asking for It Sinead Gleeson has an essay collection out called Constellations. She did an essay for Granta which is included in this book--an extraordinary piece of writing about being an adolescent in Ireland in the 1980s, the intense religiosity, being taken to Lourdes for a cure for osteoarthritis. I think it will be superb. --Sarah Ditum, Woman's Hour, Ones to Watch in 2019 An absolutely astonishing, brilliant, and beautiful book. --Kate Mosse, author of Labyrinth Gripping and mesmerizing . . . I was utterly entranced by this book . . . For all the heartache and struggle these essays cover, this is also a wonderfully optimistic and uplifting book that ought to be treasured. --Lonesome Reader Gleeson's book is a personal history both grounded in the stories of her body, with essays on bones, hair, blood, pregnancy, and surgery, and illuminated by interrogations of the art, literature, and music that have influenced her . . . The female body, in particular--especially in Ireland--is both scrutinized and dismissed, and in her essays Gleeson attempts to rescue the female form from this double punishment by placing it front and center of a story of a life. --Anna Leszkiewicz, New Statesman, The Irish writers reinvigorating the personal essay A collection of raw, beautifully charged, wide-ranging essays about living in an imperfect body, specifically a female body in Ireland, where historically women have been denied their right of corporeal self-governance . . . Gleeson's lens is close, intensely intimate, but devoid of self-pity . . . [It's] a memoir of a body that radiates out to discuss politics, literature, art, science, and history . . . Gleeson sits alongside Maggie Nelson, Siri Hustvedt, and Olivia Laing for the rigor of her debate and interrogation of ideas . . . Constellations contains a political spark, but it is a collection fueled by acceptance and solidarity. --Litro What is striking throughout Constellations is the strength of Gleeson's voice, as well as the exuberance of prose which articulates experiences that cannot have been anything other than traumatic and miserable. If, as she suggests, illness is an island in which only the sick experience suffering, the act of reading her dispatches from it will undoubtedly render you more empathetic. --Totally Dublin An artful, investigative book . . . A blessing. --The Scotsman Searing proof that women's bodies are a political battleground. --Telegraph, 5-Star Review


#1 BESTSELLER IN IRELAND WINNER OF THE IRISH BOOK AWARD FINALIST FOR THE RATHBONES FOLIO PRIZE FINALIST FOR THE MICHEL DEON PRIZE FINALIST FOR THE DALKEY LITERARY AWARD NAMED A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR BY THE GUARDIAN * OBSERVER * IMAGE * IRISH TIMES * NEW STATESMAN * IRISH INDEPENDENT Bell-clear and immaculately hewn throughout, Gleeson's voice is also strikingly muscular and dexterous . . . Her voice and what she says with it is everything her body hasn't been -- vigorous, adamantine, assured . . . Powerful registers are struck, and always there is something linking the discussion back to what is for the writer the most tangibly immediate components of her life. This is where she cracks you wide open . . . You'd need a heart of stone to resist these hymns and paeans . . . A book brimming with vitality and sincerity. --Independent (UK) [Gleeson's] personal stories of pain, illness and death are unforgettable...Her experiences are rendered vividly and with an admirable lack of self-pity...Gleeson has an eye for telling detail. --New York Times Book Review [Gleeson] writes about pain with an absorbing intensity...Constellations will make you think differently about the body in all its weaknesses and feel grateful to the artists and writers who--like Gleeson--have transfigured their suffering into a sacred creative release. Though Gleeson is skeptical of heaven, she finds solace in the stars and their many constellations. In this book, she offers a unique map of her own constellations, one that has clearly helped her find her way when navigating a wide and painful world. --BookPage Gleeson is an eloquent storyteller, and the stories are held in delicate balance with the analysis of her world. --Guardian (UK) Sinead Gleeson's essay collection brings together passionate, transcendent essays about bodies and art, ghosts and womanhood, grief and motherhood, and what it's like to live in a body that fails you. Like the perfect title indicates, this is a glistening ensemble of pieces that live on their own but, all together, form a powerful emotional universe. --Elle (UK), Ones to watch in 2019 Outstanding . . . wide-ranging, intimate, and expressive . . . it's clear that Gleeson's insight is hard-won, and that, like the women who inspire her, she has found a way to transmute her experience into something powerful that demands to be heard. --Observer (UK) Gleeson's eye for detail, particularly the absurd or tragic, is dangerously sharp. She is a thoughtful writer who emerges from her illnesses resilient and unbowed. --Times(Ireland) Dazzling . . . Things are changing, thanks to tireless campaigners like Gleeson. These essays are political and they tell of how a life can be saved several times and lived to the full, despite great pain, despite great obstacles. --Irish Times An eloquent collection of essays on health, parenthood and the brutality of being a woman inhabiting a body. --Harper's Bazaar, Irish writers are taking over literature--These are the seven you need to know about This stirring collection of personal --


#1 BESTSELLER IN IRELAND WINNER OF THE IRISH BOOK AWARD NAMED A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR BY THE GUARDIAN * OBSERVER * IMAGE * IRISH TIMES * NEW STATESMAN * IRISH INDEPENDENT Bell-clear and immaculately hewn throughout, Gleeson's voice is also strikingly muscular and dexterous . . . Her voice and what she says with it is everything her body hasn't been -- vigorous, adamantine, assured . . . Powerful registers are struck, and always there is something linking the discussion back to what is for the writer the most tangibly immediate components of her life. This is where she cracks you wide open . . . You'd need a heart of stone to resist these hymns and paeans . . . A book brimming with vitality and sincerity. --Independent (UK) Gleeson is an eloquent storyteller, and the stories are held in delicate balance with the analysis of her world. --Guardian (UK) Sinead Gleeson's essay collection brings together passionate, transcendent essays about bodies and art, ghosts and womanhood, grief and motherhood, and what it's like to live in a body that fails you. Like the perfect title indicates, this is a glistening ensemble of pieces that live on their own but, all together, form a powerful emotional universe. --Elle (UK), Ones to watch in 2019 Outstanding . . . wide-ranging, intimate, and expressive . . . it's clear that Gleeson's insight is hard-won, and that, like the women who inspire her, she has found a way to transmute her experience into something powerful that demands to be heard. --Observer (UK) Gleeson's eye for detail, particularly the absurd or tragic, is dangerously sharp. She is a thoughtful writer who emerges from her illnesses resilient and unbowed. --Times(Ireland) Dazzling . . . Things are changing, thanks to tireless campaigners like Gleeson. These essays are political and they tell of how a life can be saved several times and lived to the full, despite great pain, despite great obstacles. --Irish Times An eloquent collection of essays on health, parenthood and the brutality of being a woman inhabiting a body. --Harper's Bazaar, Irish writers are taking over literature--These are the seven you need to know about This stirring collection of personal essays from Irish radio broadcaster Gleeson effortlessly renders pain, both physical and emotional, into prose...While 'in illness it is hard to find the right words, ' Gleeson's strong work shows it is worth the effort to search for them. --Publishers Weekly An extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Irish Examiner Gleeson's writing is honest and moving and delves deep into personal experiences of sickness, health and motherhood. --Literary Hub, 8 Recommended Debuts by Irish Women Writers [Gleeson] manages to beautifully weave together the individual with the universal in a way that, if needed, puts definitively to rest the tired idea that women's writing is personal, and therefore not political . . . Her writing has the same effect as a beautifully rendered artwork; you will want to sit and contemplate it. Sentences and ideas are woven together to create an overall effect that is mesmerizing, but with a depth that will mean the ideas presented in this book linger with you. --Image (Ireland) With the publication . . . of Constellations, [Gleeson's] debut collection of essays, her own literary star will be in the ascendant. --Irish Times, Best of Irish: 10 shooting stars of Irish writing [A] collection of memoir, essay, and poetry [that] reads like a novel, like a conversation with a friend, like a confession. Beautiful and important, confirmation, as if we needed it, of the ability of women (and this woman in particular) to overcome the most difficult personal circumstances. --Kit De Waal, for the Guardian, The best books by women of the 21st century Its translucent, engaging prose can easily slip by in a single sitting, so persuasively hypnotic is our narrator . . . An undoubtedly feminist writer, Gleeson writes with great nuance . . . Constellations, along with Emily Pine's Notes to Self and Maggie O'Farrell's I Am, I Am, I Am, succeeds in reclaiming the essay . . . and reinvigorating it as a living and vital thing. --Sunday Business Post [Gleeson's] writing is eclectic and consummately delivered . . . Gleeson excels at combining personal stories with wider themes, and here she looks at everything from her own personal stories of illness, loss, and grief to the lives of famous artists and writers. In a publishing world of bluster and hype, thoughtful and subtle writing like Gleeson's is very welcome. --The Big Issue Sinead Gleeson is a writer with passion and conviction . . . [Her] new book of essays Constellations is a tidal flow of the private and deeply political world of the body. She could be described as one of the foremost feminist voices of Ireland today; an Ireland in which the body, in particular the female body, has become a furtive ground for a new mythic imaginary . . . Gleeson brings a life force to the imaginary of motherhood, love, illness, and death. --RTE, Ireland These brilliant essays read as if Gleeson has made a vow to her readers to illuminate what it means to live in a human body--for better or for worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health--all the days of her life. Come for the dark jokes and existential dread. Stay for the beauty and tenderness. --Jenny Offill, author of Weather, Dept. of Speculation, and others Sinead Gleeson has changed the Irish literary landscape, through her advocacy for the female voice. In Constellations, we finally hear her own voice, and it comes from the blood and bones of her body's history. Sinead Gleeson is an absolute force: if you want to know where passion and tenacity are born, read this book. --Anne Enright, author of The Green Road Sinead Gleeson has written one of those rare things, a wise and compassionate book full of truth and humility. There are universal themes here: love, the strength of women, survival against the odds. Beautiful prose, poetry, and history woven together to make this a must-read and a masterpiece. --Kit de Waal, author of My Name Is Leon Nimbly written, balletic in style, heartfelt, spirited, and thoughtful, Sinead Gleeson's Constellations is a powerful, inspiring gift to readers everywhere. --Jami Attenberg, author of All This Could Be Yours How lucky we are to finally have this book on our shores! Gorgeous, rigorous, abundant--Sinead Gleeson's particular fusion of emotional acuity and analytical inquiry is exciting to behold, proof that in the right hands the personal essay knows no bounds. --Kate Bolick, author of Spinster: Making a Life of One's Own Utterly magnificent. Raw, thought-provoking and galvanizing; this is a book every woman should read. --Eimear McBride, author of A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing Constellations is a truly beautiful book about the tremendous confines of the body, struck through with almost everything else in the universe, from songs to stars. --Sara Baume, author of Spill Simmer Falter Wither [Constellations] is both moving and erudite, and I find myself coming back time and again to [Glesson's] work as a touchstone for how the best writing makes links between the self and the world. --Emilie Pine, author of Notes to Self, for The Irish Times Sinead Gleeson's collection of essays is brilliant, yes, but that word is somehow too glittery, too showy. These essays celebrate a resilience that feels hard-won . . . Fierce and defiant . . . With Constellations [Gleeson] steps out into the light, a bright star ready to shine. --Dublin Review of Books Stunning, beautifully written and so important. Constellations is one of those rare books you read every ten years and it changes you. --Evie Wyld, author of All the Birds, Singing Remarkable. --Robert Macfarlane, award-winning author of Landmarks and The Old Way In Constellations, Sinead Gleeson maps the human body and the the human condition in all its triumphs and failures, leaving us with hope and survival. Her writing is startlingly good and fiercely intelligent; her research is forensic and the result is a gift to readers everywhere. --Liz Nugent, author of Skin Deep The most beautiful and brilliant book--gorgeous, furious, powerful, tender, funny, compassionate, and shockingly wise. Sinead Gleeson writes with such dazzling talent and vivid insight. Constellations is one of those rare magical books and I feel truly nourished by it. Absolutely extraordinary and life-enhancing. --Daisy Buchanan, author of How to Be a Grown Up A beautiful, life-giving series of meditations on the body, illness, motherhood, death and the self. It is a very immediate and vivid book, rooted in contemporary Ireland, but Gleeson's calm self-scrutiny makes it feel as if it could been written hundreds of years ago. --Fintan O'Toole, author of Heroic Failure: Brexit and the Politics of Pain, for The Irish Times Constellations is an extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Louise O' Neill, author of Asking for It Sinead Gleeson has an essay collection out called Constellations. She did an essay for Granta which is included in this book--an extraordinary piece of writing about being an adolescent in Ireland in the 1980s, the intense religiosity, being taken to Lourdes for a cure for osteoarthritis. I think it will be superb. --Sarah Ditum, Woman's Hour, Ones to Watch in 2019 An absolutely astonishing, brilliant, and beautiful book. --Kate Mosse, author of Labyrinth Constellations by Sinead Gleeson was a revelation and an education, profoundly moving in its laying bare of personal suffering but also intellectually satisfying in its sharing of the wisdom gained by a lifetime of close and careful reading. --Martin Doyle, for The Irish Times Even amongst the most trying of obstacles, life can still be saved, can be lived. In this powerful memoir and collection of essays, this is what Gleeson beautifully reflects on. This is her journey, in her body, as it rebels on her in countless ways: monoarticular arthritis (of which symptoms started when she was just a teen) to aggressive acute promyelocytic leukaemia when she was just 28. Her stories are political, poetic, star-gazing... they stir the soul. This one is unforgettable. --Image, 10 of our favourite books of 2019 Gripping and mesmerizing . . . I was utterly entranced by this book . . . For all the heartache and struggle these essays cover, this is also a wonderfully optimistic and uplifting book that ought to be treasured. --Lonesome Reader Gleeson's book is a personal history both grounded in the stories of her body, with essays on bones, hair, blood, pregnancy, and surgery, and illuminated by interrogations of the art, literature, and music that have influenced her . . . The female body, in particular--especially in Ireland--is both scrutinized and dismissed, and in her essays Gleeson attempts to rescue the female form from this double punishment by placing it front and center of a story of a life. --Anna Leszkiewicz, New Statesman, The Irish writers reinvigorating the personal essay A collection of raw, beautifully charged, wide-ranging essays about living in an imperfect body, specifically a female body in Ireland, where historically women have been denied their right of corporeal self-governance . . . Gleeson's lens is close, intensely intimate, but devoid of self-pity . . . [It's] a memoir of a body that radiates out to discuss politics, literature, art, science, and history . . . Gleeson sits alongside Maggie Nelson, Siri Hustvedt, and Olivia Laing for the rigor of her debate and interrogation of ideas . . . Constellations contains a political spark, but it is a collection fueled by acceptance and solidarity. --Litro What is striking throughout Constellations is the strength of Gleeson's voice, as well as the exuberance of prose which articulates experiences that cannot have been anything other than traumatic and miserable. If, as she suggests, illness is an island in which only the sick experience suffering, the act of reading her dispatches from it will undoubtedly render you more empathetic. --Totally Dublin An artful, investigative book . . . A blessing. --The Scotsman Searing proof that women's bodies are a political battleground. --Telegraph, 5-Star Review


#1 BESTSELLER IN IRELAND Bell-clear and immaculately hewn throughout, Gleeson's voice is also strikingly muscular and dexterous . . . Her voice and what she says with it is everything her body hasn't been -- vigorous, adamantine, assured . . . Powerful registers are struck, and always there is something linking the discussion back to what is for the writer the most tangibly immediate components of her life. This is where she cracks you wide open . . . You'd need a heart of stone to resist these hymns and paeans . . . A book brimming with vitality and sincerity. --Independent (UK) Gleeson is an eloquent storyteller, and the stories are held in delicate balance with the analysis of her world. --Guardian (UK) Sinead Gleeson's essay collection brings together passionate, transcendent essays about bodies and art, ghosts and womanhood, grief and motherhood, and what it's like to live in a body that fails you. Like the perfect title indicates, this is a glistening ensemble of pieces that live on their own but, all together, form a powerful emotional universe. --Elle (UK), Ones to watch in 2019 Outstanding . . . wide-ranging, intimate, and expressive . . . it's clear that Gleeson's insight is hard-won, and that, like the women who inspire her, she has found a way to transmute her experience into something powerful that demands to be heard. --Observer (UK) Gleeson's eye for detail, particularly the absurd or tragic, is dangerously sharp. She is a thoughtful writer who emerges from her illnesses resilient and unbowed. --Times(UK) Dazzling . . . Things are changing, thanks to tireless campaigners like Gleeson. These essays are political and they tell of how a life can be saved several times and lived to the full, despite great pain, despite great obstacles. --Irish Times An eloquent collection of essays on health, parenthood and the brutality of being a woman inhabiting a body. --Harper's Bazaar, Irish writers are taking over literature--These are the seven you need to know about This stirring collection of personal essays from Irish radio broadcaster Gleeson effortlessly renders pain, both physical and emotional, into prose...While 'in illness it is hard to find the right words, ' Gleeson's strong work shows it is worth the effort to search for them. --Publishers Weekly An extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Irish Examiner Gleeson's writing is honest and moving and delves deep into personal experiences of sickness, health and motherhood. --Literary Hub, 8 Recommended Debuts by Irish Women Writers [Gleeson] manages to beautifully weave together the individual with the universal in a way that, if needed, puts definitively to rest the tired idea that women's writing is personal, and therefore not political . . . Her writing has the same effect as a beautifully rendered artwork; you will want to sit and contemplate it. Sentences and ideas are woven together to create an overall effect that is mesmerizing, but with a depth that will mean the ideas presented in this book linger with you. --Image (Ireland) With the publication . . . of Constellations, [Gleeson's] debut collection of essays, her own literary star will be in the ascendant. --Irish Times, Best of Irish: 10 shooting stars of Irish writing [A] collection of memoir, essay, and poetry [that] reads like a novel, like a conversation with a friend, like a confession. Beautiful and important, confirmation, as if we needed it, of the ability of women (and this woman in particular) to overcome the most difficult personal circumstances. --Kit De Waal, for the Guardian, The best books by women of the 21st century Its translucent, engaging prose can easily slip by in a single sitting, so persuasively hypnotic is our narrator . . . An undoubtedly feminist writer, Gleeson writes with great nuance . . . Constellations, along with Emily Pine's Notes to Self and Maggie O'Farrell's I Am, I Am, I Am, succeeds in reclaiming the essay . . . and reinvigorating it as a living and vital thing. --Sunday Business Post [Gleeson's] writing is eclectic and consummately delivered . . . Gleeson excels at combining personal stories with wider themes, and here she looks at everything from her own personal stories of illness, loss, and grief to the lives of famous artists and writers. In a publishing world of bluster and hype, thoughtful and subtle writing like Gleeson's is very welcome. --The Big Issue Sinead Gleeson is a writer with passion and conviction . . . [Her] new book of essays Constellations is a tidal flow of the private and deeply political world of the body. She could be described as one of the foremost feminist voices of Ireland today; an Ireland in which the body, in particular the female body, has become a furtive ground for a new mythic imaginary . . . Gleeson brings a life force to the imaginary of motherhood, love, illness, and death. --RTE, Ireland These brilliant essays read as if Gleeson has made a vow to her readers to illuminate what it means to live in a human body--for better or for worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health--all the days of her life. Come for the dark jokes and existential dread. Stay for the beauty and tenderness. --Jenny Offill, author of Weather, Dept. of Speculation, and others Sinead Gleeson has changed the Irish literary landscape, through her advocacy for the female voice. In Constellations, we finally hear her own voice, and it comes from the blood and bones of her body's history. Sinead Gleeson is an absolute force: if you want to know where passion and tenacity are born, read this book. --Anne Enright, author of The Green Road Sinead Gleeson observes the world with grace and style and dignity. In so doing, she captures the pulse of the wound. A beautiful and important collection of essays. --Colum McCann, author of Let the Great World Spin Sinead Gleeson has written one of those rare things, a wise and compassionate book full of truth and humility. There are universal themes here: love, the strength of women, survival against the odds. Beautiful prose, poetry, and history woven together to make this a must-read and a masterpiece. --Kit de Waal, author of My Name Is Leon Nimbly written, balletic in style, heartfelt, spirited, and thoughtful, Sinead Gleeson's Constellations is a powerful, inspiring gift to readers everywhere. --Jami Attenberg, author of All This Could Be Yours How lucky we are to finally have this book on our shores! Gorgeous, rigorous, abundant--Sinead Gleeson's particular fusion of emotional acuity and analytical inquiry is exciting to behold, proof that in the right hands the personal essay knows no bounds. --Kate Bolick, author of Spinster: Making a Life of One's Own Utterly magnificent. Raw, thought-provoking and galvanizing; this is a book every woman should read. --Eimear McBride, author of A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing Constellations is a truly beautiful book about the tremendous confines of the body, struck through with almost everything else in the universe, from songs to stars. --Sara Baume, author of Spill Simmer Falter Wither Sinead Gleeson's collection of essays is brilliant, yes, but that word is somehow too glittery, too showy. These essays celebrate a resilience that feels hard-won . . . Fierce and defiant . . . With Constellations [Gleeson] steps out into the light, a bright star ready to shine. --Dublin Review of Books My god what an absolutely incredible book . . . It's stunning . . . This is one of those you read every ten years and it changes you. --Evie Wyld, author of All the Birds, Singing Remarkable. --Robert Macfarlane, award-winning author of Landmarks and The Old Way In Constellations, Sinead Gleeson maps the human body and the the human condition in all its triumphs and failures, leaving us with hope and survival. Her writing is startlingly good and fiercely intelligent; her research is forensic and the result is a gift to readers everywhere. --Liz Nugent, author of Skin Deep The most beautiful and brilliant book--gorgeous, furious, powerful, tender, funny, compassionate, and shockingly wise. Sinead Gleeson writes with such dazzling talent and vivid insight. Constellations is one of those rare magical books and I feel truly nourished by it. Absolutely extraordinary and life-enhancing. --Daisy Buchanan, author of How to Be a Grown Up Constellations is an extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Louise O' Neill, author of Asking for It Sinead Gleeson has an essay collection out called Constellations. She did an essay for Granta which is included in this book--an extraordinary piece of writing about being an adolescent in Ireland in the 1980s, the intense religiosity, being taken to Lourdes for a cure for osteoarthritis. I think it will be superb. --Sarah Ditum, Woman's Hour, Ones to Watch in 2019 An absolutely astonishing, brilliant, and beautiful book. --Kate Mosse, author of Labyrinth Gripping and mesmerizing . . . I was utterly entranced by this book . . . For all the heartache and struggle these essays cover, this is also a wonderfully optimistic and uplifting book that ought to be treasured. --Lonesome Reader Gleeson's book is a personal history both grounded in the stories of her body, with essays on bones, hair, blood, pregnancy, and surgery, and illuminated by interrogations of the art, literature, and music that have influenced her . . . The female body, in particular--especially in Ireland--is both scrutinized and dismissed, and in her essays Gleeson attempts to rescue the female form from this double punishment by placing it front and center of a story of a life. --Anna Leszkiewicz, New Statesman, The Irish writers reinvigorating the personal essay A collection of raw, beautifully charged, wide-ranging essays about living in an imperfect body, specifically a female body in Ireland, where historically women have been denied their right of corporeal self-governance . . . Gleeson's lens is close, intensely intimate, but devoid of self-pity . . . [It's] a memoir of a body that radiates out to discuss politics, literature, art, science, and history . . . Gleeson sits alongside Maggie Nelson, Siri Hustvedt, and Olivia Laing for the rigor of her debate and interrogation of ideas . . . Constellations contains a political spark, but it is a collection fueled by acceptance and solidarity. --Litro What is striking throughout Constellations is the strength of Gleeson's voice, as well as the exuberance of prose which articulates experiences that cannot have been anything other than traumatic and miserable. If, as she suggests, illness is an island in which only the sick experience suffering, the act of reading her dispatches from it will undoubtedly render you more empathetic. --Totally Dublin An artful, investigative book . . . A blessing. --The Scotsman Searing proof that women's bodies are a political battleground. --Telegraph, 5-Star Review


#1 BESTSELLER IN IRELAND WINNER OF THE IRISH BOOK AWARD Bell-clear and immaculately hewn throughout, Gleeson's voice is also strikingly muscular and dexterous . . . Her voice and what she says with it is everything her body hasn't been -- vigorous, adamantine, assured . . . Powerful registers are struck, and always there is something linking the discussion back to what is for the writer the most tangibly immediate components of her life. This is where she cracks you wide open . . . You'd need a heart of stone to resist these hymns and paeans . . . A book brimming with vitality and sincerity. --Independent (UK) Gleeson is an eloquent storyteller, and the stories are held in delicate balance with the analysis of her world. --Guardian (UK) Sinead Gleeson's essay collection brings together passionate, transcendent essays about bodies and art, ghosts and womanhood, grief and motherhood, and what it's like to live in a body that fails you. Like the perfect title indicates, this is a glistening ensemble of pieces that live on their own but, all together, form a powerful emotional universe. --Elle (UK), Ones to watch in 2019 Outstanding . . . wide-ranging, intimate, and expressive . . . it's clear that Gleeson's insight is hard-won, and that, like the women who inspire her, she has found a way to transmute her experience into something powerful that demands to be heard. --Observer (UK) Gleeson's eye for detail, particularly the absurd or tragic, is dangerously sharp. She is a thoughtful writer who emerges from her illnesses resilient and unbowed. --Times(UK) Dazzling . . . Things are changing, thanks to tireless campaigners like Gleeson. These essays are political and they tell of how a life can be saved several times and lived to the full, despite great pain, despite great obstacles. --Irish Times An eloquent collection of essays on health, parenthood and the brutality of being a woman inhabiting a body. --Harper's Bazaar, Irish writers are taking over literature--These are the seven you need to know about This stirring collection of personal essays from Irish radio broadcaster Gleeson effortlessly renders pain, both physical and emotional, into prose...While 'in illness it is hard to find the right words, ' Gleeson's strong work shows it is worth the effort to search for them. --Publishers Weekly An extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Irish Examiner Gleeson's writing is honest and moving and delves deep into personal experiences of sickness, health and motherhood. --Literary Hub, 8 Recommended Debuts by Irish Women Writers [Gleeson] manages to beautifully weave together the individual with the universal in a way that, if needed, puts definitively to rest the tired idea that women's writing is personal, and therefore not political . . . Her writing has the same effect as a beautifully rendered artwork; you will want to sit and contemplate it. Sentences and ideas are woven together to create an overall effect that is mesmerizing, but with a depth that will mean the ideas presented in this book linger with you. --Image (Ireland) With the publication . . . of Constellations, [Gleeson's] debut collection of essays, her own literary star will be in the ascendant. --Irish Times, Best of Irish: 10 shooting stars of Irish writing [A] collection of memoir, essay, and poetry [that] reads like a novel, like a conversation with a friend, like a confession. Beautiful and important, confirmation, as if we needed it, of the ability of women (and this woman in particular) to overcome the most difficult personal circumstances. --Kit De Waal, for the Guardian, The best books by women of the 21st century Its translucent, engaging prose can easily slip by in a single sitting, so persuasively hypnotic is our narrator . . . An undoubtedly feminist writer, Gleeson writes with great nuance . . . Constellations, along with Emily Pine's Notes to Self and Maggie O'Farrell's I Am, I Am, I Am, succeeds in reclaiming the essay . . . and reinvigorating it as a living and vital thing. --Sunday Business Post [Gleeson's] writing is eclectic and consummately delivered . . . Gleeson excels at combining personal stories with wider themes, and here she looks at everything from her own personal stories of illness, loss, and grief to the lives of famous artists and writers. In a publishing world of bluster and hype, thoughtful and subtle writing like Gleeson's is very welcome. --The Big Issue Sinead Gleeson is a writer with passion and conviction . . . [Her] new book of essays Constellations is a tidal flow of the private and deeply political world of the body. She could be described as one of the foremost feminist voices of Ireland today; an Ireland in which the body, in particular the female body, has become a furtive ground for a new mythic imaginary . . . Gleeson brings a life force to the imaginary of motherhood, love, illness, and death. --RTE, Ireland These brilliant essays read as if Gleeson has made a vow to her readers to illuminate what it means to live in a human body--for better or for worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health--all the days of her life. Come for the dark jokes and existential dread. Stay for the beauty and tenderness. --Jenny Offill, author of Weather, Dept. of Speculation, and others Sinead Gleeson has changed the Irish literary landscape, through her advocacy for the female voice. In Constellations, we finally hear her own voice, and it comes from the blood and bones of her body's history. Sinead Gleeson is an absolute force: if you want to know where passion and tenacity are born, read this book. --Anne Enright, author of The Green Road Sinead Gleeson observes the world with grace and style and dignity. In so doing, she captures the pulse of the wound. A beautiful and important collection of essays. --Colum McCann, author of Let the Great World Spin Sinead Gleeson has written one of those rare things, a wise and compassionate book full of truth and humility. There are universal themes here: love, the strength of women, survival against the odds. Beautiful prose, poetry, and history woven together to make this a must-read and a masterpiece. --Kit de Waal, author of My Name Is Leon Nimbly written, balletic in style, heartfelt, spirited, and thoughtful, Sinead Gleeson's Constellations is a powerful, inspiring gift to readers everywhere. --Jami Attenberg, author of All This Could Be Yours How lucky we are to finally have this book on our shores! Gorgeous, rigorous, abundant--Sinead Gleeson's particular fusion of emotional acuity and analytical inquiry is exciting to behold, proof that in the right hands the personal essay knows no bounds. --Kate Bolick, author of Spinster: Making a Life of One's Own Utterly magnificent. Raw, thought-provoking and galvanizing; this is a book every woman should read. --Eimear McBride, author of A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing Constellations is a truly beautiful book about the tremendous confines of the body, struck through with almost everything else in the universe, from songs to stars. --Sara Baume, author of Spill Simmer Falter Wither Sinead Gleeson's collection of essays is brilliant, yes, but that word is somehow too glittery, too showy. These essays celebrate a resilience that feels hard-won . . . Fierce and defiant . . . With Constellations [Gleeson] steps out into the light, a bright star ready to shine. --Dublin Review of Books My god what an absolutely incredible book . . . It's stunning . . . This is one of those you read every ten years and it changes you. --Evie Wyld, author of All the Birds, Singing Remarkable. --Robert Macfarlane, award-winning author of Landmarks and The Old Way In Constellations, Sinead Gleeson maps the human body and the the human condition in all its triumphs and failures, leaving us with hope and survival. Her writing is startlingly good and fiercely intelligent; her research is forensic and the result is a gift to readers everywhere. --Liz Nugent, author of Skin Deep The most beautiful and brilliant book--gorgeous, furious, powerful, tender, funny, compassionate, and shockingly wise. Sinead Gleeson writes with such dazzling talent and vivid insight. Constellations is one of those rare magical books and I feel truly nourished by it. Absolutely extraordinary and life-enhancing. --Daisy Buchanan, author of How to Be a Grown Up Constellations is an extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Louise O' Neill, author of Asking for It Sinead Gleeson has an essay collection out called Constellations. She did an essay for Granta which is included in this book--an extraordinary piece of writing about being an adolescent in Ireland in the 1980s, the intense religiosity, being taken to Lourdes for a cure for osteoarthritis. I think it will be superb. --Sarah Ditum, Woman's Hour, Ones to Watch in 2019 An absolutely astonishing, brilliant, and beautiful book. --Kate Mosse, author of Labyrinth Gripping and mesmerizing . . . I was utterly entranced by this book . . . For all the heartache and struggle these essays cover, this is also a wonderfully optimistic and uplifting book that ought to be treasured. --Lonesome Reader Gleeson's book is a personal history both grounded in the stories of her body, with essays on bones, hair, blood, pregnancy, and surgery, and illuminated by interrogations of the art, literature, and music that have influenced her . . . The female body, in particular--especially in Ireland--is both scrutinized and dismissed, and in her essays Gleeson attempts to rescue the female form from this double punishment by placing it front and center of a story of a life. --Anna Leszkiewicz, New Statesman, The Irish writers reinvigorating the personal essay A collection of raw, beautifully charged, wide-ranging essays about living in an imperfect body, specifically a female body in Ireland, where historically women have been denied their right of corporeal self-governance . . . Gleeson's lens is close, intensely intimate, but devoid of self-pity . . . [It's] a memoir of a body that radiates out to discuss politics, literature, art, science, and history . . . Gleeson sits alongside Maggie Nelson, Siri Hustvedt, and Olivia Laing for the rigor of her debate and interrogation of ideas . . . Constellations contains a political spark, but it is a collection fueled by acceptance and solidarity. --Litro What is striking throughout Constellations is the strength of Gleeson's voice, as well as the exuberance of prose which articulates experiences that cannot have been anything other than traumatic and miserable. If, as she suggests, illness is an island in which only the sick experience suffering, the act of reading her dispatches from it will undoubtedly render you more empathetic. --Totally Dublin An artful, investigative book . . . A blessing. --The Scotsman Searing proof that women's bodies are a political battleground. --Telegraph, 5-Star Review


#1 BESTSELLER IN IRELAND Bell-clear and immaculately hewn throughout, Gleeson's voice is also strikingly muscular and dexterous . . . Her voice and what she says with it is everything her body hasn't been -- vigorous, adamantine, assured . . . Powerful registers are struck, and always there is something linking the discussion back to what is for the writer the most tangibly immediate components of her life. This is where she cracks you wide open . . . You'd need a heart of stone to resist these hymns and paeans . . . A book brimming with vitality and sincerity. --Independent (UK) Gleeson is an eloquent storyteller, and the stories are held in delicate balance with the analysis of her world. --Guardian (UK) Sinead Gleeson's essay collection brings together passionate, transcendent essays about bodies and art, ghosts and womanhood, grief and motherhood, and what it's like to live in a body that fails you. Like the perfect title indicates, this is a glistening ensemble of pieces that live on their own but, all together, form a powerful emotional universe. --Elle (UK), Ones to watch in 2019 Outstanding . . . wide-ranging, intimate, and expressive . . . it's clear that Gleeson's insight is hard-won, and that, like the women who inspire her, she has found a way to transmute her experience into something powerful that demands to be heard. --Observer (UK) Gleeson's eye for detail, particularly the absurd or tragic, is dangerously sharp. She is a thoughtful writer who emerges from her illnesses resilient and unbowed. --Times(UK) Dazzling . . . Things are changing, thanks to tireless campaigners like Gleeson. These essays are political and they tell of how a life can be saved several times and lived to the full, despite great pain, despite great obstacles. --Irish Times An eloquent collection of essays on health, parenthood and the brutality of being a woman inhabiting a body. --Harper's Bazaar, Irish writers are taking over literature--These are the seven you need to know about An extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Irish Examiner Gleeson's writing is honest and moving and delves deep into personal experiences of sickness, health and motherhood. --Literary Hub, 8 Recommended Debuts by Irish Women Writers [Gleeson] manages to beautifully weave together the individual with the universal in a way that, if needed, puts definitively to rest the tired idea that women's writing is personal, and therefore not political . . . Her writing has the same effect as a beautifully rendered artwork; you will want to sit and contemplate it. Sentences and ideas are woven together to create an overall effect that is mesmerizing, but with a depth that will mean the ideas presented in this book linger with you. --Image (Ireland) With the publication . . . of Constellations, [Gleeson's] debut collection of essays, her own literary star will be in the ascendant. --Irish Times, Best of Irish: 10 shooting stars of Irish writing [A] collection of memoir, essay, and poetry [that] reads like a novel, like a conversation with a friend, like a confession. Beautiful and important, confirmation, as if we needed it, of the ability of women (and this woman in particular) to overcome the most difficult personal circumstances. --Kit De Waal, for the Guardian, The best books by women of the 21st century Its translucent, engaging prose can easily slip by in a single sitting, so persuasively hypnotic is our narrator . . . An undoubtedly feminist writer, Gleeson writes with great nuance . . . Constellations, along with Emily Pine's Notes to Self and Maggie O'Farrell's I Am, I Am, I Am, succeeds in reclaiming the essay . . . and reinvigorating it as a living and vital thing. --Sunday Business Post [Gleeson's] writing is eclectic and consummately delivered . . . Gleeson excels at combining personal stories with wider themes, and here she looks at everything from her own personal stories of illness, loss, and grief to the lives of famous artists and writers. In a publishing world of bluster and hype, thoughtful and subtle writing like Gleeson's is very welcome. --The Big Issue Sinead Gleeson is a writer with passion and conviction . . . [Her] new book of essays Constellations is a tidal flow of the private and deeply political world of the body. She could be described as one of the foremost feminist voices of Ireland today; an Ireland in which the body, in particular the female body, has become a furtive ground for a new mythic imaginary . . . Gleeson brings a life force to the imaginary of motherhood, love, illness, and death. --RTE, Ireland Sinead Gleeson has changed the Irish literary landscape, through her advocacy for the female voice. In Constellations, we finally hear her own voice, and it comes from the blood and bones of her body's history. Sinead Gleeson is an absolute force: if you want to know where passion and tenacity are born, read this book. --Anne Enright, author of The Green Road Sinead Gleeson observes the world with grace and style and dignity. In so doing, she captures the pulse of the wound. A beautiful and important collection of essays. --Colum McCann, author of Let the Great World Spin Sinead Gleeson has written one of those rare things, a wise and compassionate book full of truth and humility. There are universal themes here: love, the strength of women, survival against the odds. Beautiful prose, poetry, and history woven together to make this a must-read and a masterpiece. --Kit de Waal, author of My Name Is Leon Nimbly written, balletic in style, heartfelt, spirited, and thoughtful, Sinead Gleeson's Constellations is a powerful, inspiring gift to readers everywhere. --Jami Attenberg, author of All This Could Be Yours Utterly magnificent. Raw, thought-provoking and galvanizing; this is a book every woman should read. --Eimear McBride, author of A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing Constellations is a truly beautiful book about the tremendous confines of the body, struck through with almost everything else in the universe, from songs to stars. --Sara Baume, author of Spill Simmer Falter Wither Sinead Gleeson's collection of essays is brilliant, yes, but that word is somehow too glittery, too showy. These essays celebrate a resilience that feels hard-won . . . Fierce and defiant . . . With Constellations [Gleeson] steps out into the light, a bright star ready to shine. --Dublin Review of Books My god what an absolutely incredible book . . . It's stunning . . . This is one of those you read every ten years and it changes you. --Evie Wyld, author of All the Birds, Singing Remarkable. --Robert Macfarlane, award-winning author of Landmarks and The Old Way In Constellations, Sinead Gleeson maps the human body and the the human condition in all its triumphs and failures, leaving us with hope and survival. Her writing is startlingly good and fiercely intelligent; her research is forensic and the result is a gift to readers everywhere. --Liz Nugent, author of Skin Deep The most beautiful and brilliant book--gorgeous, furious, powerful, tender, funny, compassionate, and shockingly wise. Sinead Gleeson writes with such dazzling talent and vivid insight. Constellations is one of those rare magical books and I feel truly nourished by it. Absolutely extraordinary and life-enhancing. --Daisy Buchanan, author of How to Be a Grown Up Constellations is an extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Louise O' Neill, author of Asking for It Sinead Gleeson has an essay collection out called Constellations. She did an essay for Granta which is included in this book--an extraordinary piece of writing about being an adolescent in Ireland in the 1980s, the intense religiosity, being taken to Lourdes for a cure for osteoarthritis. I think it will be superb. --Sarah Ditum, Woman's Hour, Ones to Watch in 2019 An absolutely astonishing, brilliant, and beautiful book. --Kate Mosse, author of Labyrinth Gripping and mesmerizing . . . I was utterly entranced by this book . . . For all the heartache and struggle these essays cover, this is also a wonderfully optimistic and uplifting book that ought to be treasured. --Lonesome Reader Gleeson's book is a personal history both grounded in the stories of her body, with essays on bones, hair, blood, pregnancy, and surgery, and illuminated by interrogations of the art, literature, and music that have influenced her . . . The female body, in particular--especially in Ireland--is both scrutinized and dismissed, and in her essays Gleeson attempts to rescue the female form from this double punishment by placing it front and center of a story of a life. --Anna Leszkiewicz, New Statesman, The Irish writers reinvigorating the personal essay A collection of raw, beautifully charged, wide-ranging essays about living in an imperfect body, specifically a female body in Ireland, where historically women have been denied their right of corporeal self-governance . . . Gleeson's lens is close, intensely intimate, but devoid of self-pity . . . [It's] a memoir of a body that radiates out to discuss politics, literature, art, science, and history . . . Gleeson sits alongside Maggie Nelson, Siri Hustvedt, and Olivia Laing for the rigor of her debate and interrogation of ideas . . . Constellations contains a political spark, but it is a collection fueled by acceptance and solidarity. --Litro What is striking throughout Constellations is the strength of Gleeson's voice, as well as the exuberance of prose which articulates experiences that cannot have been anything other than traumatic and miserable. If, as she suggests, illness is an island in which only the sick experience suffering, the act of reading her dispatches from it will undoubtedly render you more empathetic. --Totally Dublin An artful, investigative book . . . A blessing. --The Scotsman Searing proof that women's bodies are a political battleground. --Telegraph, 5-Star Review


#1 BESTSELLER IN IRELAND Bell-clear and immaculately hewn throughout, Gleeson's voice is also strikingly muscular and dexterous . . . Her voice and what she says with it is everything her body hasn't been -- vigorous, adamantine, assured . . . Powerful registers are struck, and always there is something linking the discussion back to what is for the writer the most tangibly immediate components of her life. This is where she cracks you wide open . . . You'd need a heart of stone to resist these hymns and paeans . . . A book brimming with vitality and sincerity. --Independent (UK) Gleeson is an eloquent storyteller, and the stories are held in delicate balance with the analysis of her world. --Guardian (UK) Sinead Gleeson's essay collection brings together passionate, transcendent essays about bodies and art, ghosts and womanhood, grief and motherhood, and what it's like to live in a body that fails you. Like the perfect title indicates, this is a glistening ensemble of pieces that live on their own but, all together, form a powerful emotional universe. --Elle (UK), Ones to watch in 2019 Outstanding . . . wide-ranging, intimate, and expressive . . . it's clear that Gleeson's insight is hard-won, and that, like the women who inspire her, she has found a way to transmute her experience into something powerful that demands to be heard. --Observer (UK) Gleeson's eye for detail, particularly the absurd or tragic, is dangerously sharp. She is a thoughtful writer who emerges from her illnesses resilient and unbowed. --Times(UK) Dazzling . . . Things are changing, thanks to tireless campaigners like Gleeson. These essays are political and they tell of how a life can be saved several times and lived to the full, despite great pain, despite great obstacles. --Irish Times An eloquent collection of essays on health, parenthood and the brutality of being a woman inhabiting a body. --Harper's Bazaar, Irish writers are taking over literature--These are the seven you need to know about An extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Irish Examiner Gleeson's writing is honest and moving and delves deep into personal experiences of sickness, health and motherhood. --Literary Hub, 8 Recommended Debuts by Irish Women Writers [Gleeson] manages to beautifully weave together the individual with the universal in a way that, if needed, puts definitively to rest the tired idea that women's writing is personal, and therefore not political . . . Her writing has the same effect as a beautifully rendered artwork; you will want to sit and contemplate it. Sentences and ideas are woven together to create an overall effect that is mesmerizing, but with a depth that will mean the ideas presented in this book linger with you. --Image (Ireland) With the publication . . . of Constellations, [Gleeson's] debut collection of essays, her own literary star will be in the ascendant. --Irish Times, Best of Irish: 10 shooting stars of Irish writing [A] collection of memoir, essay, and poetry [that] reads like a novel, like a conversation with a friend, like a confession. Beautiful and important, confirmation, as if we needed it, of the ability of women (and this woman in particular) to overcome the most difficult personal circumstances. --Kit De Waal, for the Guardian, The best books by women of the 21st century Its translucent, engaging prose can easily slip by in a single sitting, so persuasively hypnotic is our narrator . . . An undoubtedly feminist writer, Gleeson writes with great nuance . . . Constellations, along with Emily Pine's Notes to Self and Maggie O'Farrell's I Am, I Am, I Am, succeeds in reclaiming the essay . . . and reinvigorating it as a living and vital thing. --Sunday Business Post [Gleeson's] writing is eclectic and consummately delivered . . . Gleeson excels at combining personal stories with wider themes, and here she looks at everything from her own personal stories of illness, loss, and grief to the lives of famous artists and writers. In a publishing world of bluster and hype, thoughtful and subtle writing like Gleeson's is very welcome. --The Big Issue Sinead Gleeson is a writer with passion and conviction . . . [Her] new book of essays Constellations is a tidal flow of the private and deeply political world of the body. She could be described as one of the foremost feminist voices of Ireland today; an Ireland in which the body, in particular the female body, has become a furtive ground for a new mythic imaginary . . . Gleeson brings a life force to the imaginary of motherhood, love, illness, and death. --RTE, Ireland Sinead Gleeson has changed the Irish literary landscape, through her advocacy for the female voice. In Constellations, we finally hear her own voice, and it comes from the blood and bones of her body's history. Sinead Gleeson is an absolute force: if you want to know where passion and tenacity are born, read this book. --Anne Enright, author of The Green Road Sinead Gleeson has written one of those rare things, a wise and compassionate book full of truth and humility. There are universal themes here: love, the strength of women, survival against the odds. Beautiful prose, poetry, and history woven together to make this a must-read and a masterpiece. --Kit de Waal, author of My Name Is Leon Nimbly written, balletic in style, heartfelt, spirited, and thoughtful, Sinead Gleeson's Constellations is a powerful, inspiring gift to readers everywhere. --Jami Attenberg, author of All Grown Up Utterly magnificent. Raw, thought-provoking and galvanizing; this is a book every woman should read. --Eimear McBride, author of A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing Constellations is a truly beautiful book about the tremendous confines of the body, struck through with almost everything else in the universe, from songs to stars. --Sara Baume, author of Spill Simmer Falter Wither Sinead Gleeson's collection of essays is brilliant, yes, but that word is somehow too glittery, too showy. These essays celebrate a resilience that feels hard-won . . . Fierce and defiant . . . With Constellations [Gleeson] steps out into the light, a bright star ready to shine. --Dublin Review of Books My god what an absolutely incredible book . . . It's stunning . . . This is one of those you read every ten years and it changes you. --Evie Wyld, author of All the Birds, Singing Remarkable. --Robert Macfarlane, award-winning author of Landmarks and The Old Way In Constellations, Sinead Gleeson maps the human body and the the human condition in all its triumphs and failures, leaving us with hope and survival. Her writing is startlingly good and fiercely intelligent; her research is forensic and the result is a gift to readers everywhere. --Liz Nugent, author of Skin Deep The most beautiful and brilliant book--gorgeous, furious, powerful, tender, funny, compassionate, and shockingly wise. Sinead Gleeson writes with such dazzling talent and vivid insight. Constellations is one of those rare magical books and I feel truly nourished by it. Absolutely extraordinary and life-enhancing. --Daisy Buchanan, author of How to Be a Grown Up Constellations is an extraordinary piece of writing--beautiful, life affirming, and full of heart. --Louise O' Neill, author of Asking for It Sinead Gleeson has an essay collection out called Constellations. She did an essay for Granta which is included in this book--an extraordinary piece of writing about being an adolescent in Ireland in the 1980s, the intense religiosity, being taken to Lourdes for a cure for osteoarthritis. I think it will be superb. --Sarah Ditum, Woman's Hour, Ones to Watch in 2019 An absolutely astonishing, brilliant, and beautiful book. --Kate Mosse, author of Labyrinth Gripping and mesmerizing . . . I was utterly entranced by this book . . . For all the heartache and struggle these essays cover, this is also a wonderfully optimistic and uplifting book that ought to be treasured. --Lonesome Reader Gleeson's book is a personal history both grounded in the stories of her body, with essays on bones, hair, blood, pregnancy, and surgery, and illuminated by interrogations of the art, literature, and music that have influenced her . . . The female body, in particular--especially in Ireland--is both scrutinized and dismissed, and in her essays Gleeson attempts to rescue the female form from this double punishment by placing it front and center of a story of a life. --Anna Leszkiewicz, New Statesman, The Irish writers reinvigorating the personal essay A collection of raw, beautifully charged, wide-ranging essays about living in an imperfect body, specifically a female body in Ireland, where historically women have been denied their right of corporeal self-governance . . . Gleeson's lens is close, intensely intimate, but devoid of self-pity . . . [It's] a memoir of a body that radiates out to discuss politics, literature, art, science, and history . . . Gleeson sits alongside Maggie Nelson, Siri Hustvedt, and Olivia Laing for the rigor of her debate and interrogation of ideas . . . Constellations contains a political spark, but it is a collection fueled by acceptance and solidarity. --Litro What is striking throughout Constellations is the strength of Gleeson's voice, as well as the exuberance of prose which articulates experiences that cannot have been anything other than traumatic and miserable. If, as she suggests, illness is an island in which only the sick experience suffering, the act of reading her dispatches from it will undoubtedly render you more empathetic. --Totally Dublin An artful, investigative book . . . A blessing. --The Scotsman Searing proof that women's bodies are a political battleground. --Telegraph, 5-Star Review


Author Information

SINÉAD GLEESON is a writer, editor and freelance broadcaster. She has been published in Granta, among many other places, and is the editor of three award-winning short story anthologies, including The Long Gaze Back: an Anthology of Irish Women Writers. Previously, she presented The Book Show on RTÉ Radio One in Ireland.

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