The Week (US)

Best books…chosen by Ingrid Rojas Contreras

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In a new memoir, The Man Who Could Move Clouds, Colombian-American novelist Ingrid Rojas Contreras explores a peculiar heritage: a family belief in some members’ supernatur­al gifts. Below, she recommends other memoirs rooted in the uncanny.

The Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston (1976). This book knocked me off my feet. I reread it immediatel­y, letting it breathe into my imaginatio­n all that memoir could be. Kingston writes about the ghost stories that have shaped her, beginning with tales told about her late aunt, who died by suicide and whom her family refused to mention by name. Kingston reframes the story to call for rememberin­g all women who’ve been erased.

The Collected Schizophre­nias by Esmé Weijun Wang (2019). Wang’s sharp, masterful personal essays seek to map what happens to the self within and outside the borders of illness. In one of my favorite essays, she considers the line between mental illness and supernatur­al abilities.

The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down by Anne Fadiman (1997). No other book offers a more fascinatin­g look into how cultures with different understand­ings of medicine and healing interact with the Western medical system. Fadiman focuses on a family from Laos who are told that their daughter is epileptic but believe that her soul is taking flight from her body. The

book is an absolute wonder for how it holds space for the disparate meanings that can arise from differing worldviews.

Bruja by Wendy C. Ortiz (2016). In a book she calls a dreamoir, Ortiz describes dreams she had across four years. Bruja explodes with the surreality and high-pitched emotions that belong to the realm of dreaming, dragging out with it strange creatures, haunted houses, and shark attacks.

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