Still Pictures, 9781922458735
Paperback
A master observer turns her sharp gaze, finally, on herself.

Still Pictures

on photography and memory

$29.60

  • Paperback

    176 pages

  • Release Date

    16 January 2023

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Summary

Still Pictures: A Memoir of a New York Childhood

For decades, Janet Malcolm’s books and dispatches poked and prodded at reportorial and biographical convention. In Still Pictures, she turns her eye on her own life.

Beginning with the image of a young girl on her way from Prague to New York in 1939, to fitful early loves and her fascination with being a ‘bad girl’, Malcolm assembles a portrait of a New York childhood, one that never escapes the tug of Europe and the mysteries…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781922458735
ISBN-10:1922458732
Author:Janet Malcolm
Publisher:Text Publishing
Imprint:The Text Publishing Company
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:176
Release Date:16 January 2023
Weight:167g
Dimensions:198mm x 130mm x 19mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

‘With no weak selections and several strikingly prescient ones, this collection shows its author as a master of narrative nonfiction.’

‘Superb…[The] final, splendid, most personal work of her long career.’ * New York Times *‘These [Still Pictures] essays are a radical departure from everything else Malcolm wrote over the course of her career: they concern people, places, and items that populated her younger life…She used her journalistic work to explore her own mind, especially some of its more submerged corners…She knew better than most that the only thing scarier than writing about oneself is letting someone else wrest control of the narrative.’ * LitHub *‘Malcolm subverts the traditional memoir by telling her story around a series of photographs. The “reluctant autobiographer” turns out to be a skilled scrapbook artist.’ * Harper’s Bazaar *‘From the moment you open it, the book does not present itself as a conventional memoir…Most autobiography assumes a proximity, an easy intimacy with the past, an unbroken flow. This one argues instead that memories must be fought for, interrogated, uncovered…In some sense Malcolm’s book is the last argument in her career-long project to question the production of official stories, to reveal and illuminate the million vanities, exaggerations, character flaws that feed into their creation: the human error.’ * Atlantic *‘Touching…What leavens Still Pictures throughout is Czech humour that, in its irreverence and intolerance for pomposity, is similar to Australian wit.’ * Age *‘Quietly brilliant, beautifully meandering…A profound and transformative intervention in the field of life writing and literature generally…This book, the mature work of a writer at the end of her life but at the height of her understanding, is essentially a paean to what goes unremembered. It’s a reading experience I won’t readily forget.’ * Saturday Paper *‘Highly evocative.’ * Inside Story *‘An apt and fascinating coda to a celebrated and provocative life’s work.’ * Conversation *‘Selective postcards of asperity and wisdom… Its jumbled cast…are so wonderfully and lucidly sketched—a lost world to be found in their manners, their clothes, their furniture (a covered pewter bowl is a novel in itself). Even as Malcolm insists that the past issues no visas, she slips smoothly over the border, lost papers only spurring her on.’ * Guardian *‘Lean, clear and powerful…[Malcolm] is very honest.’ * RNZ: Nine to Noon *‘A testament to those attributes Malcolm most admired (and relied on her journalistic subjects to lack): dignity, discretion, craft, and control. In its guardedness, its respect for privacy, its disinterest in demythologizing, its tenderness and even credulity, Still Pictures makes explicit a muted moral provocation running through Malcolm’s books: that we are all essentially false Pharisees, serial violators of the Golden Rule, constantly claiming exemptions, forbearance, and reprieves for ourselves (and those whom we love) that we would never permit to others.’ * New Republic *‘Malcolm has found a way to make the biographical humble, in the best sense of that word, allowing nuance, uncertainty, and association, not conviction, to drive her telling of human lives…Malcolm’s writing leaves nowhere to hide, yet her subjects—even at their worst—are held in her profoundly humanistic gaze, as still as a picture.’ * Australian Book Review *

About The Author

Janet Malcolm

Janet Malcolm (1934-2021) was the author of many books, including In the Freud Archives; The Journalist and the Murderer; Two Lives- Alice and Gertrude, which won the 2008 PEN/Jacqueline Bograd Weld Award for Biography; and Forty-One False Starts, which was a finalist for the 2013 National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism. She was a frequent contributor to the New Yorker and the New York Review of Books. In 2017, Malcolm received the Gold Medal for Belles Lettres and Criticism from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

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