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Even as a fourth-generation Jewish Texan, S.L. Wisenberg always felt the ghost of Europe dogging her steps, making her feel uneasy in her body and in the world.

With wit, verve, blood, scars, and a solid dose of self-deprecation, Wisenberg wanders across the expanse of continents and combs through history books and family records in her search for home and meaning. Her travels take her from Selma, Alabama, where her Eastern European Jewish ancestors once settled, to Vienna, where she tours Freud’s home and figures out what women really want, and she visits Auschwitz, which—disappointingly— leaves no emotional mark. The Wandering Womb: Essays in Search of Home will arrive in bookstores March 31, 2023. Her book won the  2022 Juniper Prize in nonfiction from University of Massachusetts Press.

Join us for a conversation with S.L.Wisenberg about her new book. This hybrid event will take place in the Jewish Studies Center, Arnold Hall (Room 100) and via Zoom. Brunch will be served beginning at 9:00 a.m.

Reviews of the book:

“In The Wandering Womb, our bodies (the vulnerable, the despised, the used) are the receptacles of history. We survive to tell its tales if we were permitted to live or had the luck to escape. Regimes and religions control and define our bodies, through traditions and laws that kidnap us right out of our own skins. Our names are documents of diaspora, our maps of wandering; Wisenberg’s life as a Texan Jew lets her see the swirling entanglement of the Black and Jewish diasporas, where catastrophes echo and pull apart. In The Wandering Womb, history breathes into our lungs and speaks through every word we say.”
– Riva Lehrer, author of the award-winning Golem Girl: A Memoir

“A sharp, deeply questioning mind and a wayward heart inform these delicious essays. They are wry, humorous, melancholy, and universally relatable, filled with the shock of recognition.”
– Phillip Lopate, distinguished essayist, celebrated editor of The Art of the Personal Essay, and many others

“Each essay is a lens through which we are invited to view in Joycean detail the author’s deeply personal present, yet at the same time to ponder and to rethink larger worlds of history and cultures. It’s a collection that often is wry but never cynical, deeply learned and always alert to humor and wonder.”
– David Toomey, author of Weird Life: The Search for Life That Is Very, Very Different from Our Own, and professor of English and director of the Professional Writing and Technical Communication Program at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst

“Sometimes subtle, sometimes fierce, these brilliant feminist essays explore Woman’s role as patient, cultural warrior, daughter, partner, and artist. Lyrical and targeted, they express what it’s like to be a Jewish woman today, and what it’s like to be an embodied human being.”
– Paula Kamen, author, All in My Head: An Epic Quest to Cure an Unrelenting, Totally Unreasonable and Only Slightly Enlightening Headache; and the play Jane: Abortion and the Underground

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