Jeannie Vanasco is the author of the memoirs Things We Didn't Talk About When I Was a Girl and The Glass Eye. Born and raised in Sandusky, Ohio, she lives in Baltimore and is an associate professor of English at Towson University.
A cuttingly funny meta-meditation on her own pain in the context of #MeToo.-- O, The Oprah Magazine A gripping read and true fodder for the necessary reckoning with toxic masculinity.-- BuzzFeed A remarkably nuanced account of the complicated and confusing emotions that surface when your rapist is someone you knew and trusted.-- The Cut A stunning work of meta nonfiction. . . . Vanasco's narrative pushes far past the flattened media narrative of Me Too and asks uncomfortable questions about how to talk about rape culture, toxic masculinity and gender, justice, and resilience.-- Shondaland About violence and forgiveness, about friendship and the unwanted title of victim, about digging deeper and deeper to seek answers.-- The New York Times Book Review An extraordinarily brave work of self- and cultural reflection.-- Kirkus, Starred Review Bold, unsettling, and timely. . . . A reckoning with injustice.--Laurie Halse Anderson TIME Gorgeous, harrowing, heartbreaking.--Carmen Maria Machado Bustle Heartfelt, painful, and essential.-- Shelf Awareness Intrepid. . . . A work that has the potential to change the way we think and talk about rape and the people who commit it.-- Bitch Perhaps the most important book of the season.-- Esquire Sets the canon of #MeToo-era creative nonfiction on fire. . . . Inimitable.-- Booklist, Starred Review Striking. . . . Creates a language for something we don't talk about.-- The Paris Review Thought-provoking, unmooring, and haunting.-- NYLON Utterly brilliant.-- Book Riot Vanasco immediately makes you wonder how we can take so much about sexual assault for granted.-- The Times Literary Supplement A literary feminist miracle.--Sophia Shalmiyev, author of Mother Winter A rigorous and nuanced investigation.--Lisa Locascio, author of Open Me About how important it is to speak about these oft-silenced experiences that cause so many to feel ashamed, scared, and alone.--NPR An essential, unforgettable work.--Erik Anderson, author of Flutter Point Astonishingly fierce.--Emily Geminder, author of Dead Girls and Other Stories Brilliant.--Megan Stielstra, author of The Wrong Way to Save Your Life Cuts through the silence of deep betrayal.--Amy Jo Burns, author of Shiner Exactly the book we need right now. . . . I wish everyone in this country would read it.--Melissa Febos, author of Abandon Me Explores the common experience of rape with uncommon nuance and intense tenderness.--YZ Chin, author of Though I Get Home Interrogates the terms of betrayal and the limits of redemption.--Tim Taranto, author of Ars Botanica Stunning.--Angela Pelster, author of Limber There is so much power in these pages.--Elissa Washuta, author of My Body is a Book of Rules Vanasco is a formidable talent.--Daniel Gumbiner, author of The Boatbuilder Wickedly clever and powerful.--Krystal A. Sital, author of Secrets We Kept: Three Women of Trinidad