The Twenty-Seventh Letter of the Alphabet

The Twenty-Seventh Letter of the Alphabet

2018 • 303 pages

Clear-sighted, darkly comic, and tender, The Twenty-Seventh Letter of the Alphabet is about a daughter’s struggle to face the Medusa of generational trauma without turning to stone. Growing up in the New Jersey suburbs of the 1970s and 1980s in a family warped by mental illness, addiction, and violence, Kim Adrian spent her childhood ducking for cover from an alcoholic father prone to terrifying acts of rage and trudging through a fog of confusion with her mother, a suicidal incest survivor hooked on prescription drugs. Family memories were buried—even as they were formed—and truth was obscured by lies and fantasies. In The Twenty-Seventh Letter of the Alphabet Adrian tries to make peace with this troubled past by cataloguing memories, anecdotes, and bits of family lore in the form of a glossary. But within this strategic reckoning of the past, the unruly present carves an unpredictable path as Adrian’s aging mother plunges into ever-deeper realms of drug-fueled paranoia. Ultimately, the glossary’s imposed order serves less to organize emotional chaos than to expose difficult but necessary truths, such as the fact that some problems simply can’t be solved, and that loving someone doesn’t necessarily mean saving them.


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Series

Featured Series

13 released books

American Lives

American Lives is a 13-book series first released in 2002 with contributions by Ted Kooser, Floyd Skloot, and Aaron Raz Link.

Local Wonders: Seasons in the Bohemian Alps
In the Shadow of Memory
What Becomes You
Between Panic and Desire
Searching for Tamsen Donner
Yellowstone Autumn: A Season of Discovery in a Wondrous Land
Island of Bones: Essays
Queen of the Fall : A Memoir of Girls and Goddesses
Pain Woman Takes Your Keys, and Other Essays from a Nervous System
When We Were Ghouls: A Memoir of Ghost Stories
The Twenty-Seventh Letter of the Alphabet
A Certain Loneliness: A Memoir

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