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How Did I Get Here?

A Memoir

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

A literary exploration that seeks to answer the question: Have I lived the life I intended?

Based on an essay he wrote for Poets & Writers magazine, Jesse Browner, a novelist who finds himself torn between his creative calling and a full-time job in the civil service, asks hard questions about the choices life imposes on us, and our tendency to believe in a parallel, alternative existence where we might have felt more fulfilled, more free, more true to ourselves. He wonders: Is the genuine artist made by single-minded devotion to his craft? Do we compromise our dreams in service to family and work? In the face of life's inevitable disappointments, how do we learn to reassess our own achievements and live without regret?

These questions prompted Browner to take a hard look at the lifelong journey that brought him to this moment of existential doubt. He divides his adult life into five distinct phases: ambition, love, work, fulfillment, and wisdom. Sketching portraits of himself at each stage, he looks for the idiosyncrasies, blind spots, and commonalities that led him to question every assumption he has ever made about who he is and the nature of his ambitions, his successes, and his failures. He also draws on the lives of others, from Franz Kafka to indie rocker Elliott Smith to his own sister, in search of understanding and guidance. What he finds in his courageous quest is inspiring and honest—sometimes brutally so—touching on what it means to live a life with intention and meaning.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 16, 2015
      The title of this memoir by novelist and nonfiction writer Browner (Everything Happens Today) refers to the Talking Heads song “Once in a Lifetime,” recognizable to anyone of his generation (he’s a late boomer/early Generation Xer). But Robert Frost’s well-known poem “The Road Not Taken” supplies the subtitle and becomes much more of a touchstone for Browner. This is an account of an intellectual grappling with midlife regret and what ifs. Browner, a self-avowed “B-list novelist” who left behind the bohemian life for a day job, marriage, and family, examines his choices and wonders whether he can set aside regret and make peace with being “a vaguely affable nonentity who has made all the right decisions for himself and his family except the one decision he needs to make—to once and for all kill off his obsolete, petrified self-image, and fully embrace the happiness that is his due.” There’s nothing glib about this self-help memoir. Full of Boethius and Rilke mixed with self-analysis, it’s a beautifully written, erudite, and thought-provoking examination of the underpinnings of a creative life. Agent: Gail Hochman, Brandt & Hochman.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2015

      As many people do in later midlife, Browner (Everything Happens Today) wondered if he had compromised his dreams by putting his family and job first. He details his quest by dividing his life into five phases: ambition, love, work, fulfillment, and serenity, and examines it and the lives of artists, philosophers, and writers/poets to determine what was and wasn't accomplished. The work the author delivers is a philosophical and psychological pondering of how independent people really are in building their own lives. His conclusion is: people would probably find themselves the same had they chosen another path. VERDICT An exceptional group study guide for academics.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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