Reviews
Advance praise for Cynthia Zarin's AN ENLARGED HEART: A Personal History (A. A. Knopf, February 12, 2013) "In gauzy yet substantial prose, Zarin ( The Ada Poems , 2010, etc.) takes readers on a journey through a lifetime's worth of homes, relationships and landscapes, displaying wry humor and an endearing sense of uneasiness with the tropes of memoir. Far from an exhibitionist's tell-all, this collection instead grants us entry into the world of a private person, a woman who acknowledges that she is 'entirely unsuited to selflessness' and who doles out tantalizingly cryptic bits of personal information . . . . Pulses with a life force that illustrates why this poet 'had also begun to love the shape that prose made in [her] head.'" - Kirkus Reviews "Lustrously descriptive, complexly emotional, and exquisitely crafted personal essays . . . . acute observations and incisive reflections . . . Each episode is ensnaring, each setting scrupulously and atmospherically evoked in language silken and cut on the bias. But it is what she makes out of these reassembled remnants of memory that imbues this book with its lambent beauty and philosophical resonance." - Booklist " An Enlarged Heart is irresistible. In a series of elegant, piercing moments, Cynthia Zarin unleashes the immense power of the intimate, conjuring both the past and the present with brilliance and wit, transforming anecdote into art. These pages beat with precision, sorrow, color, strength and life." - Jane Mendelsohn "Cynthia Zarin's moving and beautiful memoir, An Enlarged Heart , accomplishes one of the rarer of literary feats-it locates the profound in the outwardly ordinary. Zarin masterfully reveals those significant emotional, moral, and aesthetic truths that tend to conceal themselves among everyday events, an act of camouflage so effective as to require a truly brilliant writer to show us the beauty and terror of that which has long been hiding, often in plain sight. An Enlarged Heart is a large book." - Michael Cunningham, "Enchanting. . . . Zarin knits her stories together with an appealing and deeply intimate voice." -- Boston Globe "The essays' overlapping corners have a cumulative power, evoking a disappeared New York . . . in which a young romantic began making her way in words." -- Vogue "There were moments throughout that reminded me of Didion at her elegiac best, which is perhaps the finest compliment I know how to pay an essayist.... Zarin [is] a first-rate practitioner." --Christopher Beha, The New York Times Book Review "Zarin takes readers on a journey through a lifetime's worth of homes, relationships and landscapes. . . . Pulses with a life force." -- Kirkus Reviews [starred review] "A dozen delightful essays set in a mostly ephemeral Manhattan.... [Zarin] weaves a lyrical memoir out of mundane urban experiences . . . with characters ranging from William Shawn, the New Yorker editor, to Mr. Ferri, an Upper East Side tailor, whom she vividly describes as 'a wren of a man with pins flashing in his teeth.'" -- The New York Times "Elegant, interlocking essays . . . [with] an underlying generosity of spirit. Her remembrances, while revealing, are refreshingly devoid of the medical-grade dysfunction we've come to expect from memoir. . . . An enlarged heart is surely a marvelous thing." -- San Francisco Chronicle "Lustrously descriptive, complexly emotional, and exquisitely crafted personal essays. . . . Each episode is ensnaring, each setting scrupulously and atmospherically evoked in language silken and cut on the bias. But it is what she makes out of these reassembled remnants of memory that imbues this book with its lambent beauty and philosophical resonance." -- Booklist "Zarin's moving and beautiful memoir accomplishes one of the rarer of literary feats--it locates the profound in the outwardly ordinary. Zarin masterfully reveals those significant emotional, moral, and aesthetic truths that tend to conceal themselves among everyday events, an act of camouflage so effective as to require a truly brilliant writer to show us the beauty and terror of that which has long been hiding, often in plain sight. An Enlarged Heart is a large book." --Michael Cunningham, author of By Nightfall and The Hours "Irresistible. In a series of elegant, piercing moments, Zarin unleashes the immense power of the intimate, conjuring both the past and the present with brilliance and wit, transforming anecdote into art. These pages beat with precision, sorrow, color, strength and life." --Jane Mendelsohn, author of Innocence and I Was Amelia Earhart , "Enchanting. . . . Zarin knits her stories together with an appealing and deeply intimate voice." -- Boston Globe "The essays' overlapping corners have a cumulative power, evoking a disappeared New York . . . in which a young romantic began making her way in words." - Vogue "There were moments throughout that reminded me of Didion at her elegiac best, which is perhaps the finest compliment I know how to pay an essayist…. Zarin [is] a first-rate practitioner." -Christopher Beha, The New York Times Book Review "Zarin takes readers on a journey through a lifetime's worth of homes, relationships and landscapes. . . . Pulses with a life force." - Kirkus Reviews [starred review] "A dozen delightful essays set in a mostly ephemeral Manhattan…. [Zarin] weaves a lyrical memoir out of mundane urban experiences . . . with characters ranging from William Shawn, the New Yorker editor, to Mr. Ferri, an Upper East Side tailor, whom she vividly describes as 'a wren of a man with pins flashing in his teeth.'" - The New York Times "Elegant, interlocking essays . . . [with] an underlying generosity of spirit. Her remembrances, while revealing, are refreshingly devoid of the medical-grade dysfunction we've come to expect from memoir. . . . An enlarged heart is surely a marvelous thing." -- San Francisco Chronicle "Lustrously descriptive, complexly emotional, and exquisitely crafted personal essays. . . . Each episode is ensnaring, each setting scrupulously and atmospherically evoked in language silken and cut on the bias. But it is what she makes out of these reassembled remnants of memory that imbues this book with its lambent beauty and philosophical resonance." - Booklist "Zarin's moving and beautiful memoir accomplishes one of the rarer of literary feats-it locates the profound in the outwardly ordinary. Zarin masterfully reveals those significant emotional, moral, and aesthetic truths that tend to conceal themselves among everyday events, an act of camouflage so effective as to require a truly brilliant writer to show us the beauty and terror of that which has long been hiding, often in plain sight. An Enlarged Heart is a large book." -Michael Cunningham, author of By Nightfall and The Hours "Irresistible. In a series of elegant, piercing moments, Zarin unleashes the immense power of the intimate, conjuring both the past and the present with brilliance and wit, transforming anecdote into art. These pages beat with precision, sorrow, color, strength and life." -Jane Mendelsohn, author of Innocence and I Was Amelia Earhart, "Enchanting. . . . Zarin knits her stories together with an appealing and deeply intimate voice." -- Boston Globe "The essays' overlapping corners have a cumulative power, evoking a disappeared New York . . . in which a young romantic began making her way in words." -- Vogue "There were moments throughout that reminded me of Didion at her elegiac best, which is perhaps the finest compliment I know how to pay an essayist.... Zarin [is] a first-rate practitioner." --Christopher Beha, The New York Times Book Review "Zarin takes readers on a journey through a lifetime's worth of homes, relationships and landscapes. . . . Pulses with a life force." -- Kirkus Reviews [starred review] "A dozen delightful essays set in a mostly ephemeral Manhattan.... [Zarin] weaves a lyrical memoir out of mundane urban experiences . . . with characters ranging from William Shawn, the New Yorker editor, to Mr. Ferri, an Upper East Side tailor, whom she vividly describes as 'a wren of a man with pins flashing in his teeth.'" -- The New York Times "Elegant, interlocking essays . . . [with] an underlying generosity of spirit. Her remembrances, while revealing, are refreshingly devoid of the medical-grade dysfunction we've come to expect from memoir. . . . An enlarged heart is surely a marvelous thing." -- San Francisco Chronicle "Lustrously descriptive, complexly emotional, and exquisitely crafted personal essays. . . . Each episode is ensnaring, each setting scrupulously and atmospherically evoked in language silken and cut on the bias. But it is what she makes out of these reassembled remnants of memory that imbues this book with its lambent beauty and philosophical resonance." -- Booklist "Zarin's moving and beautiful memoir accomplishes one of the rarer of literary feats--it locates the profound in the outwardly ordinary. Zarin masterfully reveals those significant emotional, moral, and aesthetic truths that tend to conceal themselves among everyday events, an act of camouflage so effective as to require a truly brilliant writer to show us the beauty and terror of that which has long been hiding, often in plain sight. An Enlarged Heart is a large book." --Michael Cunningham, author of By Nightfall and The Hours "Irresistible. In a series of elegant, piercing moments, Zarin unleashes the immense power of the intimate, conjuring both the past and the present with brilliance and wit, transforming anecdote into art. These pages beat with precision, sorrow, color, strength and life." --Jane Mendelsohn, author of Innocence and I Was Amelia Earhart