Mary Years: A Novella

Julie Marie Wade

Book cover for Mary Years: A Novella
Book cover for Mary Years: A Novella

Mary Years: A Novella

Mary Years: A Novella

Julie Marie Wade

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Description

Winner of The 2023 Clay Reynolds Novella Prize, selected by Michael Martone
​2024 Foreword INDIES Finalist in Popular Culture

Who's your hero? What television show did you binge-watch, even before "binge-watching" was part of our vernacular? For Julie Marie Wade, the hero is Mary Tyler Moore, the television show, The Mary Tyler Moore Show. From its premiere on Nick at Nite in 1992 until the death of its eponymous lead actress in 2017, this nonfiction novella follows our protagonist from her pre-teen years in Seattle through tenure at an academic institution in Miami--a journey modeled in surprising, tender, and humorous ways on Mary's own journey from Roseburg to Minneapolis, to the WJM newsroom and beyond.

About the Author

JULIE MARIE WADE is the author of many collections of poetry, prose, and hybrid forms, including the recent volumes Otherwise: Essays, selected by Lia Purpura for the 2022 Autumn House Nonfiction Book Prize, and Skirted: Poems. A winner of the Marie Alexander Poetry Series and the Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Memoir, Wade is professor of creative writing at Florida International University and makes her home with Angie Griffin and their two cats in Dania Beach. In 1992, she began watching The Mary Tyler Moore Show on Nick at Nite and never stopped.

Critical Reviews

"What an enchanting memoir. You don't have to be a fan of The Mary Tyler Moore Show--or even know what it is--to be captivated by this funny, sad, inspiring journey of a clear-sighted woman for whom a fictional character is a guide for navigating life's very real challenges. For MTM fans, of course, Julie Marie Wade's book is a not-to-be-missed treat."--Clifford Thompson, author of What It Is: Race, Family, and One Thinking Black Man's Blues and Twin of Blackness: A Memoir

"An ekphrasis, an homage, a recuperation of a retrospectively subversive feminist icon, and a deft cultural critique of a 1970's classic television show, Julie Marie Wade's The Mary Years is also a delightful and incredibly moving memoir read entirely through the lens of The Mary Tyler Moore Show. The Mary Years chronicles Wade's coming of age into independence, into feminism, into coming out as a lesbian and forming an artistic identity as a writer--while overcoming incredible sociocultural and familial pressures to live a life in compliance with conservative political, religious, and heteronormative values. Dazzlingly innovative and shape-shiftingly fluid in form, this memoir is in many ways a love letter to female role models, mentors, friends, and lovers--particularly the ones that light up pathways outside the obligatory confines of limiting and restrictive futures, the ones that illuminate alternate ways of making sense of one's life. Funny, smart, and occasionally heartbreaking, this wonderful memoir has the fierce torque and iconic joy of a bright homemade tam-o-shanter spiraling up into a cold, winter sky."
--Lee Ann Roripaugh, author of tsunami vs. the fukushima 50--Lee Ann Roripaugh

"Who knew Our Lady of the Tam Toss, '70s icon Mary Richards, would provide the perfect bridge from a strict '50s-values Catholic upbringing for a queer '90s teen? In this unique memoir strung from lyric moments like beads on a rosary, Wade writes her own tender credo--part filmography, part hagiography, part coming-of-age coming-out story--of what it means to be a modern woman. To do so, she looks backward to look forward, a runner running not from but to, who prays Thank God for re-runs."
--Heidi Czerwiec, author of Fluid States

--Heidi Czerwiec

"What an enchanting memoir. You don't have to be a fan of The Mary Tyler Moore Show--or even know what it is--to be captivated by this funny, sad, inspiring journey of a clear-sighted woman for whom a fictional character is a guide for navigating life's very real challenges. For MTM fans, of course, Julie Marie Wade's book is a not-to-be-missed treat."
--Clifford Thompson, author of What It Is: Race, Family, and One Thinking Black Man's Blues and Twin of Blackness: A Memoir

--Clifford Thompson

"When life doesn't give you the models you need, find them in fiction. 'We become ourselves through other people after all, ' writes Julie Marie Wade at the beginning and end of her nonfiction novella The Mary Years. Wade's tam-throwing Dante is Mary Richards of The Mary Tyler Moore Show--a scripted character who leads the author out of the many deadlier scripts written for her at birth. Rich in comedic timing and nimbly cinematic, The Mary Years' infectious charm never obscures the real pathos of working through homophobia, estrangement, and growing out of as well as into. Reading these pages made me want to make JMW my own MTM."
--Susanne Paola Antonetta, author of The Terrible Unlikelihood of Our Being Here--Susanne Paola Antonetta

"[The Mary Years] celebrates the unexpected parallels between a young lesbian living in a restrictive home setting and the triumphs and tribulations of Mary Tyler Moore and her beloved sitcom character Mary Richards. Wade tells this coming of age/coming out story with grace and insight. . . . The book's sensational middle section alone, 'Lamonts Might Have Been My WJM, ' makes The Mary Years a fabulous gift."
--Gregg Shapiro in The Bay Area Reporter

--Gregg Shapiro "The Bay Area Reporter" (12/15/2024 12:00:00 AM)

"In The Mary Years, Julie Marie Wade, a writing professor and award-winning essayist and poet uses the object of her lifelong fascination--the fictional Mary Richards of the 1970s sitcom The Mary Tyler Moore Show--as a lens through which to view her own life, from the only child growing up with conservative parents in the 1990s to queer adult. A particular treat for MTM fans."
--Clifford Thomson in The Wall Street Journal--Clifford Thompson "The Wall Street Journal" (12/8/2024 12:00:00 AM)

"Wade writes with charm and evocative prose . . . The Mary Years is an engaging account of Wade's study of a beloved television figure and the impact that had on her life."
--Ellen Birkett Morris in Southern Review of Books

--Ellen Birkett Morris "Southern Review of Books" (2/5/2025 12:00:00 AM)

Publishing Information

Publisher: Texas Review Press
Pub date: 2024-11-18
Length: 172 pages

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