Elizabeth Joy Arnold

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Susan
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Elizabeth Joy Arnold

Goodreads Author


Born
in The United States
Website

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Genre

Member Since
March 2013


Average rating: 3.58 · 5,236 ratings · 827 reviews · 8 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Book of Secrets

3.75 avg rating — 1,927 ratings — published 2013 — 9 editions
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Pieces of My Sister's Life

3.59 avg rating — 1,980 ratings — published 2007 — 13 editions
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When We Were Friends

3.27 avg rating — 1,115 ratings — published 2011 — 10 editions
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Promise the Moon: A Novel

3.55 avg rating — 213 ratings — published 2008 — 10 editions
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Auf ewig und einen Tag: Roman

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it was ok 2.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2009
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Auf ewig und einen Tag

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Einundachtzig Worte

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Promise the Moon

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Target Emerging Author

Just learned that THE BOOK OF SECRETS was chosen for Target's Emerging Author program through the end of August. I'm geekily excited! It means great placement in the stores so...we'll see what happens.

My previous books have sold well there, but to me this cover (which I had nothing to do with other than approving it, just bragging on the RH design department here) just screams pick me up and read Read more of this blog post »
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Published on July 08, 2013 14:43 Tags: elizabeth-joy-arnold, novel, target, the-book-of-secrets
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Juice by Tim Winton
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The Place of Shells by Mai Ishizawa
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The Crane Husband by Kelly Barnhill
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Elizabeth Arnold made a comment in the group Tournament of BooksThe History of Sound topic
" It's my zombie vote too, as soon as I saw the shortlist (even the longlist) I was gunning for it, one of my top five reads this year. Can interconnect ...more "
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" Kyle wrote: "Whoever recommended Devil Is Fine, thanks! I thought it was pretty great (reminded me a lot of "Hell of a Book") and I might recommend it ...more "
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Quotes by Elizabeth Joy Arnold  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“We think we know our friends, our lovers, but really all we know is pieces of them. Fragments we learn by watching, sharing time and place, listening to their stories; over the years there are more and more of these fragments and we can draw lines between them, fill them with what we imagine is truth. But of course we only know what they show us; lines we think jig here may actually curl somewhere else altogether. The lines we draw aren't always real, and often have more to do with our own selves.”
Elizabeth Joy Arnold, The Book of Secrets

“Strong is on the inside, a root that keeps you standing whatever might hit you. But hard is only on the outside, this shield you put up to keep all the pain on the inside from showing. The soft inside is still there even when you don't let yourself see it. And the shell keeps you safe, but it also keeps the good things from penetrating; love and trust and joy.”
Elizabeth Joy Arnold, The Book of Secrets

“We think we know our friends, our lovers, but really all we know is pieces of them”
Elizabeth Joy Arnold, The Book of Secrets

“With an obscure hesitation one steps into the day and its frame and its costume. Between the puzzlement and its summary abandonment, between the folds of waking consciousness and their subsequent limitation, is a possible city. Solitude, hotels, aging, love, hormones, alcohol, illness – these drifting experiences open it a little. Sometimes prolonged reading holds it ajar. Another’s style of consciousness inflects one’s own; an odd syntactic manner, a texture of embellishment, pause. A new mode of rest. I can feel physiologically haunted by a style. It’s why I read ideally, for the structured liberation from the personal, yet the impersonal inflection can persist outside the text, beyond the passion of readerly empathy, a most satisfying transgression that arrives only inadvertently, never by force of intention. As if seized by a fateful kinship, against all the odds of sociology, the reader psychically assumes the cadence of the text. She sheds herself. This description tends towards a psychological interpretation of linguistics, but the experience is also spatial. I used to drive home from my lover’s apartment at 2 a.m., 3 a.m. This was Vancouver in 1995. A zone of light-industrial neglect separated our two neighbourhoods. Between them the stretched-out city felt abandoned. My residual excitement and relaxation would extend outwards from my body and the speeding car, towards the dilapidated warehouses, the shut storefronts, the distant container yards, the dark exercise studios, the pools of sulphur light, towards a low-key dereliction. I would feel pretty much free. I was a driver, not a pronoun, not a being with breasts and anguish. I was neither with the lover nor alone. I was suspended in a nonchalance. My cells were at ease. I doted on nothing.”
Lisa Robertson, The Baudelaire Fractal

“You will forget him.” He tried to find the words to say, “This boy is only the first of many that you will meet over your life. They will stack upon one another, week by week. You’ll try to keep them in your head but, eventually, you’ll become too full and they’ll spill out and be left behind. And then, one day, you’ll grow older and you’ll realize that you’ve forgotten his name—the name of the first dead Black boy that you promised yourself you wouldn’t forget—and you’ll hate yourself. You’ll hate your memory. You’ll hate the world. You’ll hate the way you’ve failed to stop the flow of dead bodies that have piled up in your mind. You’ll try to fix it, and fail, and you’ll drown in rage. You’ll turn on yourself for not fixing everything and you’ll drown in sadness. And you’ll do it over, and over, and over again for years and, one day, you’ll have a son and you’ll see him staring down the same road that you’ve been on and you’ll want to say something that fixes him, something that saves him from it all . . . and you won’t know what to say.”

William wanted to say all of the correct words to Soot, but they were not in his mind. All that was in William’s mind was the image of his son lying on the concrete, dead, just like all the boys that came and went on television.”
Jason Mott, Hell of a Book

“Among the most beautiful things I’ve ever heard anyone say came from my student Bethany, talking about her pedagogical aspirations or ethos, how she wanted to be as a teacher, and what she wanted her classrooms to be: “What if we joined our wildernesses together?” Sit with that for a minute. That the body, the life, might carry a wilderness, an unexplored territory, and that yours and mine might somewhere, somehow, meet. Might, even, join. And what if the wilderness—perhaps the densest wild in there—thickets, bogs, swamps, uncrossable ravines and rivers (have I made the metaphor clear?)—is our sorrow? Or, to use Zadie Smith’s term, the “intolerable.”

It astonishes me sometimes—no, often—how every person I get to know—everyone, regardless of every- thing, by which I mean everything—lives with some profound personal sorrow. Brother addicted. Mother murdered. Dad died in surgery. Rejected by their family. Cancer came back. Evicted. Fetus not okay.

Everyone, regardless, always, of everything. Not to mention the existential sorrow we all might be afflicted with, which is that we, and what we love, will soon be annihilated. Which sounds more dramatic than it might. Let me just say dead. Is this, sorrow, of which our impending being no more might be the foundation, the great wilderness? Is sorrow the true wild? And if it is—and if we join them—your wild to mine—what’s that? For joining, too, is a kind of annihilation. What if we joined our sorrows, I’m saying. I’m saying: What if that is joy?”
Ross Gay, The Book of Delights: Essays

“Because in trying to articulate what, perhaps, joy is, it has occurred to me that among other things—the trees and the mushrooms have shown me this—joy is the mostly invisible, the underground union between us, you and me, which is, among other things, the great fact of our life and the lives of everyone and thing we love going away. If we sink a spoon into that fact, into the duff between us, we will find it teeming. It will look like all the books ever written. It will look like all the nerves in a body. We might call it sorrow, but we might call it a union, one that, once we notice it, once we bring it into the light, might become flower and food. Might be joy.”
Ross Gay, The Book of Delights: Essays

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