A genre-bending meditation on sickness, spirituality, creativity, and
the redemptive powers of writing.
Notes Made While Falling is both a genre-bending memoir and a cultural
study of traumatized and sickened selves in fiction and film. It offers
a fresh, visceral, and idiosyncratic perspective on creativity,
spirituality, illness, and the limits of fiction itself. At its heart is
a story of a disastrously traumatic childbirth, its long aftermath, and
the out-of-time roots of both trauma and creativity in an extraordinary
childhood.
Moving from fairgrounds to Agatha Christie, from literary festivals to
neuroscience and the Bible, from Chernobyl to King Lear, Ashworth takes
us on a fantastic journey through familiar landscapes transformed
through unexpected encounters and comic combinations. The everyday
provides the ground for the macabre and the absurd, as the narration
twists and stretches time. Hovering on the edge of madness, writing, it
seems, might keep us sane--or might just allow us to keep on living.
In Notes Made While Falling, Ashworth calls for a redefinition of the
creative work of thinking, writing, teaching, and being, and she
underlines the necessity of a fearlessly compassionate and empathic
attention to vulnerability and fragility.