One March morning, writer Floyd Skloot was inexplicably struck by an
attack of unrelenting vertigo that ended 138 days later as suddenly as
it had begun. With body and world askew, everything familiar had
transformed. Nothing was ever still. Revertigo is Skloot s account of
that unceasingly vertiginous period, told in an inspired and
appropriately off-kilter form.
This intimate memoir tenuous, shifting, sometimes humorous demonstrates
Skloot s considerable literary skill honed as an award-winning essayist,
memoirist, novelist, and poet. His recollections of a strange, spinning
world prompt further musings on the forces of uncertainty, change, and
displacement that have shaped him from childhood to late middle age,
repeatedly knocking him awry, realigning his hopes and plans, even his
perceptions. From the volatile forces of his mercurial, shape-shifting
early years to his obsession with reading, acting, and writing, from the
attack of vertigo to a trio of postvertigo (but nevertheless dizzying)
journeys to Spain and England, and even to a place known only in his
mother s unhinged fantasies, Skloot makes sense of a life s
phantasmagoric unpredictability.
Finalist, Sarah Winnemucca Award for Creative Nonfiction, Oregon Book
Awards"