Description
Description
An open, frank rumination on a brother's death and its reverberations throughout a family
Every family has its stories and secrets. Laurie Hertzel's family had more than its share. At an early age, Laurie, the seventh of the ten Hertzel children, took on the challenge of sorting them out. Not old enough to be one of the Big Kids, yet too old to be with the Three Little Kids, she spent most of her time alone, reading, wandering, and observing her family as they moved around her in their house in Duluth. Though her parents were not warm, there were moments of closeness in those years--gifts of Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House books and special trips to the dairy for a sundae--but everything shattered after the sudden death of Laurie's oldest sibling, eighteen-year-old Bobby, when she was just nine years old.
Moving back and forth in time, Laurie reflects on Bobby's death and what happens to a family's story when no one can talk about a tragedy and its toll. In Ghosts of Fourth Street, readers witness how the apparition of memories, the shadow of needs unmet, and the spirit of a family once whole all linger long after the death of a child and brother. As Laurie shares her experiences, we see the emergence of her fascination with story and truth as she teaches herself to read and finds solace and inspiration in books amid the tensions and competing agendas within her big, complicated family.
With keen attention, candor, and grace, Laurie paints a vivid portrait of 1960s Duluth as she poignantly examines a family contending with grief and the fact that life steadily goes on--snow and school buses, Christmases and Thanksgivings, ice skating and tobogganing and climbing trees, with ghosts always lingering at the edges.
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About the Author
About the Author
A lifelong journalist, Laurie Hertzel spent fifteen years as the books editor at the Minneapolis Star Tribune and now reviews for the Boston Globe, Washington Post, and Los Angeles Times. Her memoir News to Me: Adventures of an Accidental Journalist, also published by the University of Minnesota Press, won a Minnesota Book Award. She is a past president of the National Book Critics Circle and has taught at the Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis and The Ohio State University. In 2023, she received the Kerlan Award in recognition of exceptional support for children's literature. She is a Distinguished Professor of Practice in the low-residency MFA program in narrative nonfiction at the University of Georgia.
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
"Journalist Laurie Hertzel leads us through her Duluth girlhood amongst ghosts, until the deepest haunting happens when she's nine, and her brother Bobby dies shockingly. Her family of twelve fractures in silence, but Hertzel knows that memories don't just live in our shadows, they're present in our very DNA, making us who we are, even as they keep who we've lost alive. Monumentally moving."--Caroline Leavitt, New York Times best-selling author of Days of Wonder and Pictures of You
"This wholesome, complex, and fascinating memoir documents the life of a middle daughter coping with the swirl of nine siblings (one doesn't make it), a dictatorial father, and an overwhelmed mother. Young Laurie Hertzel learns to stay bemused and alert; reading sustains her. By the final chapter, she's exultantly surfaced into the sunshine of 'those empty spaces we fill with stories.'"--Mark Kramer, founding director, Nieman Program on Narrative Journalism, Harvard University
"In Ghosts of Fourth Street, Laurie Hertzel somehow elegizes not only her own childhood in the 1960s but mine, too. Cars squeaking down snowy streets. Sugary sludge at the bottom of a bowl of Frosted Flakes. The ghost that must be living behind the furnace. How does she remember her childhood so vividly? How does she remember mine? Whatever is universal in twentieth-century American childhood, it's here."--Melissa Fay Greene, author of Praying for Sheetrock and No Biking in the House Without a Helmet
"Laurie Hertzel lifts the trapdoor and invites us into a mid-century American childhood teeming with snowclouds and striving siblings, restive phantoms, dark sulks and merry feasts. Ghosts of Fourth Street is well-honed and achingly generous--its central tragedy will stick in my chest a long time."--Leif Enger, author of I Cheerfully Refuse
"The wide-eyed, endearing little girl at the heart of this tale movingly shows us how children metabolize loss."--Kirkus Reviews
Publishing Information
Publishing Information

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