Celebrated writer Eula Biss pens a collection of personal essays on capitalism, class and consumerism.
Eula Biss is the author of three books, including the New York Times bestseller On Immunity- An Inoculation, which was named one of the 10 Best Books of 2014 by the New York Times Book Review, and Notes from No Man's Land- American Essays, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for criticism. Her work has appeared in Harper's, the New York Times, Believer, and elsewhere, and has been supported by an NEA Literature Fellowship, a Howard Foundation Fellowship, and a Guggenheim Fellowship.
'A major achievement. Having and Being Had, rather than leading
through narrative, turns individual words and phrases, like
capitalism, consumers, great America, husbandry, art and work, into
fields of inquiry in order to frame a life. With astute
consideration, this expansive and intimate accumulation asks the
questions that touch all our lives.'
*Claudia Rankine*
'Eula Biss is known for stepping off the plank into turbulent
waters that others might fear or avoid, armed with wry wit and a
radical lucidity. Having and Being Had continues this journey,
offering us a probing tour of capitalism and class that sidesteps
posturing and jargon in favor of clarity, humility, and
incitement.'
*Maggie Nelson*
'No contemporary writer I know explores and confronts her own
societal responsibilities better than Eula Biss. In Having and
Being Had she unpacks capitalism as a lived practice of a thinking
person. She makes you surprised and delighted by the way she
extracts complex ideas from mundane situations.'
*Aleksandar Hemon*
'In this witty, genre-bending book, Eula Biss smashes the taboo
against talking about money with exhilarating results. Her
investigation ranges from the strictly financial to the broadly
philosophical as she accounts for her life with disarming honesty
and grace.'
*Jenny Offill*
'Eula Biss’s prescient new book gave me new language for things I
didn’t know I felt about money, capitalism, and my place inside of
an economy that always requires so much of me and gives back so
little. A brilliant, lacerating re-examination of our relationship
to what we own and why, and who in turn might own us in ways we
didn’t know we consented to—what could be more necessary now?'
*Alexander Chee*
‘Having and Being Had is an artful masterpiece. In it, Eula Biss
takes the ordinary—work, money, gardening, family—and strips it of
ordinariness. In undressing life as such, she troubles the
relations that bind us to objects, to property, and shows us the
true cost of debt.’
*Ellena Savage*
‘A stylish, meditative inquiry into the function and meaning of
21st-century capitalism...this eloquent, well-informed account
recasts the everyday world in a sharp new light.'
*Publishers Weekly*
‘[Having and Being Had] has turned the interrogative mode into a
sound...This is an essential book for our out-of-control times of
greed.’
*John Freeman, LitHub*
‘Biss marvels at the uncertainty and discomfort people display when
assigning costs and value to their work—and the way these
discussions are further burdened by problems of race and gender,
particularly in terms of how slavery and marriage turned people
into property…A typically thoughtful set of Biss essays: searching,
serious, and determined to go beyond the surface.’
*Kirkus Reviews (starred review)*
‘Reads like a study in disquietude itself…[Biss's] writing is calm
and precise, without flourish, so clear it belies the difficulty of
writing prose so crystalline.’
*Chicago Tribune*
‘[Biss’s] intellect is omnivorous, roving, and humane...Biss is a
more thoughtful guide than most. She proceeds with a calm,
attentive curiosity.’
*The Cut*
'Biss’ works of nonfiction expand the definition of personal
essays. She is not afraid to disclose personal details, but she
isn’t writing memoir; she is illustrating points. What guides her
writing is careful attention to language and behavior, cause and
effect...Having and Being Had is a reminder that even discussing
our contemporary chaos is an act of awakening and a call to
action...Biss examines these stories of ideas in order to help us
live with our fate — asking, among other questions: To what degree
can we come to know our passions as something free from
consumerism? How can we live a life of dignity — with flashes even
of luxury and indulgence — without sacrificing ourselves through
work without joy or income beyond purpose?’
*Los Angeles Times*
‘Enthralling...Her allusive blend of autobiography and criticism
may remind some of The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson, a friend whose
name pops up in the text alongside those of other artists and
intellectuals who have influenced her work. And yet, line for line,
her epigrammatic style perhaps most recalls that of Emily Dickinson
in its radical compression of images and ideas into a few chiseled
lines ... Biss wears her erudition lightly ... she’s really funny,
with a barbed but understated wit ... Keenly aware of her privilege
as a white, well-educated woman who has benefited from a wide
network of family and friends, Biss has written a book that is, in
effect, the opposite of capitalism in its willingness to
acknowledge that everything she’s accomplished rests on the labor
of others.’
*Associated Press*
‘Compulsively readable…The artfulness of Biss’ prose is fully on
display in this memoir, which is made of tiny short-form pieces
strung together like beads on a necklace, each one leading to the
next yet also standing alone like a perfectly formed droplet. This
is a book that asks to be read, absorbed and read again.’
*BookPage*
‘A compelling philosophical drift with intellectual anchoring,
piercing analysis and reflection with subtle humour...The easily
consumable chapters—limited to two to three pages—read as sublime
devotionals.’
*Arts Hub*
‘[T]he kind of enthralling read that opens up your thinking in new
and exciting ways.’
*Readings*
'Having and Being Had is a reminder that even discussing our
contemporary chaos is an act of awakening and a call to
action...Long may Biss enjoy at least enough market value to make
art out of whatever subjects she chooses.’
*Stuff NZ*
‘A powerful look at the ways in which we assign value to the
people, places and things that comprise our lives.’
*Time*
'This collection is curious, sharp, funny (truly) and full of
questions we, as a society, have forgotten how to ask about how we
spend, what we buy, why we work, what labor is and how we calculate
worth.’
*NPR*
‘Heartfelt and smart, fiery and furious, and a thoroughly
invigorating read.’
*Fiona Wright*
‘If you are not deeply discomfited by the time you finish reading
On Having and Being Had, you have no conscience.’
*Guardian*
'Think Jenny Offill’s use of blank space. Think Maggie Nelson’s
combination of erudition and readability. Think Rachel Cusk’s
conversational magnetism. Think Claudia Rankine’s political
genre-blending. You want to read this. You need to read this.’
*Bookmunch*
‘Biss has an eye for subtle points of style, an ear for double
entendres, and a taste for teasing the irony out of
both...Lyrical...Evocative.’
*New York Review of Books*
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