Lidia Yuknavitch: The beauty of being a misfit
In her acclaimed novels and memoir, author Lidia Yuknavitch navigates the intersection of tragedy and violence to draw new roadmaps for self-discovery. Full bio
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of things that are big,
about something very small.
because it's so literal.
who sort of missed fitting in.
misfits in the room,
came right to my doorstep.
I'd won a giant literary prize
as a competitive swimmer
and loss can make you insane.
to meet big-time editors and agents
writer's dream, right?
the letter came to my house?
for an entire day,
I'd already screwed my life up.
failed marriages underneath my belt.
not once but twice
that I'm not going to tell you about.
of rehab for drug use.
staycations in jail.
I think, I was a misfit,
the day she was born,
how to live with that story yet.
I also spent a long time homeless,
of zombie grief and loss
are some of our most heroic misfits,
to just about every category out there:
sad stone in my throat.
that I got on that plane
see your heads glowing.
famous writers you wanted to meet,
and found them for you.
late in the night
and smart and swank, too.
of editors and authors and agents
I stole three linen napkins --
so that when I got home,
happened to me.
and Peggy Phelan.
best-selling authors,
that later became my art bible.
permission to believe
my stories could be part of the world.
could be more important than my boobs.
through the mainstream
water cut the Grand Canyon.
over-50-year-old women writers.
killed me with joy
in New York I wanted to die there.
I'm good. This is beautiful."
will understand what happened next.
of Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
was like my mega-dream press.
were published there.
and talked to me for a long time,
like a numb idiot,
came out of my throat.
on the shoulder
to the offices of W.W. Norton,
I'd be escorted from the building
and touching the moon
across the cosmos.
a deal it was to me.
with these beady, bright, fierce eyes
something then, immediately!"
especially TED people,
and licking a stamp.
at the National Poetry Club.
Hoyt & Picard Literary Agency,
like, on the spot.
were dressed so beautifully,
that small, sad stone in my throat ...
about people like me.
how to hope or say yes
we deserve to be in the room
and I'd coach myself.
over-50-year-old women who helped me.
You belong in the room, too."
and rain come back into view,
of airplane "feel sorry for yourself."
I was some kind of misfit writer.
and heart-ful of memories
I allowed myself.
who tries to get you to shut up
only you know how to tell."
the woman over 50.
I've had to reinvent a self
were really just weird-ass portals
was give voice to the story.
about following your dreams.
to reinvent yourself
or your job or your husband
in the middle of your failure
and phenomenal misfit,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Lidia Yuknavitch - AuthorIn her acclaimed novels and memoir, author Lidia Yuknavitch navigates the intersection of tragedy and violence to draw new roadmaps for self-discovery.
Why you should listen
Writer Lidia Yuknavitch discovered her calling after an interrupted journey as a would-be Olympic swimmer. Her prose erases the boundaries between memoir and fiction, explodes gender binaries and focuses on the visceral minutiae of the body.
She was inspired by Ken Kesey (with whom she collaborated on a collective novel project at Oregon University); her latest book, The Small Backs of Children, stands as a fictional counterpoint to her memoir The Chronology of Water, which has garnered her a cult following for its honesty and intensity.
Lidia Yuknavitch | Speaker | TED.com