Praise for Glad to Be Human
Glad to Be Human takes a defibrillator to your creative center! Its a field guide to embracing the creativity and spontaneity that bring joy to the business of being human. With an artists eye and a poets soul, Irene OGarden shines her light on the bliss that surrounds us. Each of her essays turns the eye toward love and possibility. I am changed by these now dog-eared pages, and I will return to them again and again for ins piration.
Annabel Monaghan, author of The Digit series, columnist for The Week an d HuffPost
Glad to Be Human is a journey of joy. Irene OGarden has crafted a collection of inspiring, illuminating and vibrant vignettes and reflections that delight and provoke at the same time. Her humor, artistry and love of life are infectious. Whether you read one story at a time or consume the book from cover to cover, you will find insights and phrases that will stay with you long after you put the b ook down.
Joanne Sandler, author, senior associate of , former deputy executive director for program and policy at the UN Development Fund for Women, producer and cohost of the podcast Two O ld Bitches
In a world thats so challenging and complicated, its not always easy to remain optimistic. But it is possible. This book reminds us to hunt for light in the darkest placesand find beauty in every day life.
Susan Hyatt, entrepreneur, TEDx speaker, bestselling auth or of BARE
Reading Irene OGardens Glad to Be Human : Adventures in Optimism is like spending a weekend with your best friend and talking non-stop about everything under the sun. Provided, of course, that you are lucky enough for this best friend to be as wise, witty, thoughtful, articulate, and expressive as Irene OGarden. Written in an engaging and carefully crafted style that often shades lyrically into prose poetry, OGardens essays cover a wide range of experiences, from love and loss, to laughter and living fully in each day. OGarden explores the essence of what it means to be human with a clear-sightedness that acknowledges pain and suffering while remaining constantly open to wonder, hope, and joy.
Sheila Fisher, professor of English, Trinity College, author of Selected Canterbury Tales: A New Verse T ranslation, Chaucers Poetical Alchemy, and o ther works
What a joy to read this book! Irene OGardens essays are wise and generous, bubbling over with startling and heartfelt insights about our lives and struggles. I kept pen and paper handy to record the many ideas that I want to think about again a nd again.
Rosalind Reisner, author of Jewish American Literature: A Guide to Reading Interests, editor and contributing author to Women in the Literary Landscape: A Centennial Publication of the Womens National Book A ssociation
This is really a delightful book! Irene OGarden takes everyday tasks and objects and turns them into fascinating insights. Glad to Be Human helped me look around in wonder and find my own delights. In addition to her brilliant text, I loved OGardens black and white photos and alluring a phorisms.
June Cotner, author of Gratitude Prayers , Back to Joy , and thirty-four o ther books
Get ready to devour the offerings at this table set by word weaver and poet Irene OGarden. Sure, a feast for those who love metaphors, but a banquet, too, for those who prefer the real deal: Life is here for the taking. Love is here for the taking. So take it! This stunning collection of curiosities and illuminations (which I share with my writing students, who marvel at OGardens attention to the tiny and ordinary charms in our midst) shows why being human warrants gladness, and with nods to the big and small (A saddleback caterpillar? The Leaning Tower of Pisa?), readers discover the brightest gift of all: g ratitude.
Kathy Curto, author of Not for Nothing: Glimpses into a Jersey Girlhood and faculty at Sarah Lawrence Writing Institute and Montclair State University
Praise for Risking the Rapids
Family is landscape, writes Irene OGarden in her breathtaking memoir, Risking the Rapids. She gives us a bold dose of both as she embarks on a remote river trip to help make sense of a family wild and dangerous. In her brave eloquence, OGarden adds a thoroughly welcome voice to the rich vein of American literature on the singular healing powers of wi lderness.
Florence Williams, author of The Nature Fix , LA Times Book Prize winner and editor at Outsid e magazine
Risking the Rapids is a deep and powerful memoir. Irene OGarden sifts through her familys shared pain (and shared joy!) with elegance and caresearching for nothing less than ultimate understanding and supreme for giveness.
Martha Beck, sociologist, life coach, bestselling author, columnist for O, The Opra h Magazine
Set aside a goodly few hours with OGardens enthralling memoir and plunge into the lives of a family that has chosen you as their new member. Here they are on horseback, immersed in rivers, on tops of mountainscamping, sleeping, quarreling, and forgiving Risking the Rapids embraces our being and never lets go.
Malachy McCourt, author of Ireland and A Mon k Swimming
It is a tricky business, navigating the river of forgiveness while honoring the injured self. In that wilderness the psyche must surrender to each boulder life smashes it against, and then stand in awe as we experience the changes wrought within our very DNA that are the gifts of facing down our demons; the gifts of looking our inner and outer truths square in the eye. OGarden does this better than anyone I know and then puts it into words that have the cadence o f angels.
Linda Ford Blaikie, CSW, psychotherapist and author of God less Grace
Irene OGardens memoir is riveting, fiercely honest, and graced with poetic insight. An imaginative child plagued by insecurities, OGarden vied with six siblings for her parents approval and lived beneath the Damocles sword of Catholic doctrine. Her chronicle of growing up in what seemed then a normal Midwestern family in the 1950s and 60s asks, Who were we, really? in a far-ranging, haunting journey of d iscovery.
Victoria Riskin, former president of the Writers Guild of America, West, author of Fay Wray and Robert Riskin: A Hollyw ood Memoir
Irene OGardens Risking the Rapids is, simply put, a literary triumph. Her roiling journey through the whitewater of big family turbulence is alternately a companionable sisterly punch in the shoulder and a vicious left hook to the jaw. And as is true for all superb writing, it is the left hook that unexpectedly provides the narrators stunningeven transcendentpassage into calm waters and healing. Put aside whatever has gained your attention right now and read this book. OGarden is truly a wonderf ul guide.
Steven Lewis, New York Times writer, Sarah Lawrence Writing Institute teacher, author of Lov ing Violet
Risking the Rapids artfully peels back the layers of family to reveal both the darkness and the diamond. OGarden lyrically shares the challenging circumstances of her Midwest, Catholic childhood as a thread woven through a story of present-day danger during what is supposed to be a simple outing. The kaleidoscope effect of past and present, reflection and struggle bring the reader along on a powerful healing journey to bring what is hidden into t he light.
HeatherAsh Amara, author of Warrior Goddes s Training
I havent experienced this kind of reverberating tension and utter fascination with a family since Jeannette Wallss memoir, The Glass Castle . Irene OGardens long career of treasured work hits its highest note yet with her memoir. How she survived her upbringing in a big, dysfunctional Catholic familyand the harrowing wilderness trip through whitewaters she took as an adult with her familyis riveting and ultimately healing.
Debbie Phillips, author of Women on Fire: 20 Inspiring Women Share Their Life Secrets (and Save You Years of Struggle!)
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