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Fall 2016 Case Writer: Joshua MacIver-Andersen
Fred Ewing Case and Lola Austin Case Visiting Writer this year is Joshua MacIvor-Anderse. November 2, 5pm, University Art Gallery. Free to public.聽Link to his Advertisement: Josh MacIver-Andersen
Josh MacIvor-Andersen is a former Tennessee-state tree climbing champion, the author of the memoir On Heights & Hunger, and the editor of Rooted, An Anthology of Arboreal Nonfiction.
His essays, reviews, and reportage have won numerous awards and nominations for the Pushcart Prize, and can be found in journals and magazines such as Gulf Coast, Paris Review Daily, Fourth Genre, Arts and Letters, Sycamore Review, Sojourners, Geez, Ruminate, Rock and Sling, National Geographic/Glimpse, Diagram, The Drum, The Collagist, Garden and Gun, Memoir (and), New Millennium Writings, Our State, Prism, and The Northwest Review, among others.
On Heights & Hunger is a memoir of two professional and competitive tree-climbing brothers, both hungry for transcendence and adventure, coming to terms with their relationship to the divine, the family that first provided a framework for faith, and their own obsessions, victories, and failures.
Advance praise for On Heights & Hunger
鈥淲ritten with a passion that burns into the page, Josh MacIvor-Andersen straps the pieces of his own story to his back and takes us up into the canopy above, into a 鈥榯ree hunger鈥 where he shaves and prunes and cuts until he arrives at the many shimmering truths of this beautifully told profession of love: for his brother, for physical labor, for the earth we have abused, for the search for God, for beauty, for the right woman, for the way to live this one life we are all given. This is one of the finest memoirs I鈥檝e read in quite a while.鈥濃 Andre Dubus III
鈥淛osh MacIvor-Andersen鈥檚 debut memoir On Heights and Hunger somehow feels like an ancient tale, a myth of family and faith and trees that has been retold for a modern audience. There is wrestling in these pages--honest and painful wrestling with demons and doubt, and it is this essayistic reckoning through story that pulls me in and keeps me watching, almost hypnotized, as he dances through time and place with the same grace and skill with which Andersen and his brother danced through the trees of Nashville.鈥濃 Steven Church, author of One with the Tiger: Sublime and Violent Encounters between Man and Animal and a founding editor of The Normal School.
鈥淚 met the human gods of MacIvor-Andersen鈥檚 gorgeous and big-hearted memoir once before, in William Blake鈥檚 giants of inner conflict that everyone must embrace to be whole. In On Heights & Hunger, it鈥檚 as though you鈥檇 stepped into the pages of Joseph Campbell鈥檚 journeys, where the wounded hero is brother Aaron, maniacal in the trees, fearless and 鈥榓lmost dying all the time.鈥 There鈥檚 a mighty lot of chainsaws and testosterone in this tale of purely male energy in youth鈥攁nd then, surprise, it ripens into deep tenderness for all sentient beings. Truly half out of their minds when young, Aaron and Josh grow into men of compassion and ineffable sweetness. Yet nothing鈥檚 predictable here, so the trajectory isn鈥檛 just toward a pilgrim鈥檚 progress鈥攆or a journey dedicated to the life-force, it remains a piercing rumination on mortality, a death-trip looking back from beyond the vale.鈥濃 Diana Hume George, author of The Lonely Other: A Woman Watching America
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