"Throughout this stunning book of essays, we journey into memory through a 'music made of accumulation.' Fleda Brown's voice is edgy, direct, yet surprisingly tender. A decrepit summer cottage, a brain-damaged brother, even an exhaustingly difficult father are all part of the symphony she offers her lucky readers."—Rebecca McClanahan, author of <i>The Riddle Song and Other Rememberings </i> "In these elegant, associative essays, Fleda Brown writes movingly of her metamorphosis in spirit, body, and mind from her hoop-skirted childhood to the present. Her essays are often elegiac, always tender and compassionate, her language a poet's, her memory a composer's."—Robin Hemley, director of the Nonfiction Writing Program at the University of Iowa "Fleda Brown's memoir, <i>Driving with Dvorak</i> . . . invokes the elegiac tradition while Brown drives us across spaces as wide as America itself: the architecture of family, marriage, divorce and re-marriage, and the essential defining of self."—Scott Whitaker,<i> Broadkill Review</i>
Acknowledgments
Changing My Name
I Am Sick of School
Anatomy of a Seizure
Driving with Dvorak
Walls Six Feet Thick
Summer House
Relativity for Dummies
To Tell a Story
Hiking with Amy
New Car
War of the Roses
Returning the Cats
Showgirls
Private Bath
Where You Are
Soft Conversations