Reviewed by: BigAl
Genre: Memoir
Approximate word count: 15-20,000 words
Availability
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Author:
Shana
Hammaker is the author of the TwelveTerrifying Tales for 2011 series, where a different short thriller was
released each month, and another memoir, The Cookie Dumpster. Follow Shana on Twitter.
Description:
“Words are
puzzles. Words are lies. Words are power. Words are hope.
Hieroglyphs
is a dark and unique coming-of-age story.
Shana
Hammaker was the second of three girls born to young and ill-equipped parents.
She and her sisters grew up under some of the most harrowing conditions you’re
likely to encounter in print.
Shana spent
her formative years dueling against a drug-addicted mother, an uncaring father,
and a cruel stepmother. She lost her virginity to a trusted family friend
before she could ride a bike. And she was ultimately abandoned by her family
and the child welfare system. At seventeen, Shana’s childhood ended on the
street.
Through it
all, Shana found strength and comfort in words. Words are everything. Words can
uplift and they can condemn. Words can name you and give you strength. Words
are puzzles. Words are power. Words are lies. Sometimes words create. Other
times they destroy.
Words can
turn a rape victim into a whore.
But words
are also HOPE.”
Appraisal:
Last year when I read and reviewed The
Cookie Dumpster, Hammaker’s memoir about her time living on the streets of
Santa Cruz, California, I praised the book for its authentic, unvarnished look
at the plight of the homeless. But I also begged for more. The Cookie Dumpster covered a very specific and relatively short
period of Hammaker’s life, but I thought there was more to tell and suggested
her story cried out for a prequel, telling us what brought her life to the
point where living on the street was her only, or at least best, option. The Cookie Dumpster ended at a logical
point in Hammaker’s life, a turning point where her life was changing, but it
felt like there was a possible sequel there as well.
Hieroglyphs is both prequel and sequel,
starting with Hammaker’s childhood, deftly covering the time chronicled in The Cookie Dumpster without feeling like
anything is being skipped for those who haven’t read Hammaker’s first memoir, and
without feeling like covering old ground, for those who have. It then finishes
with the next chapter of her life, ending at another logical stopping point. I
got what I’d wished for.
There are
many lessons or insights to be gained from the author’s life, starting with how
much the luck of the draw influences the life you lead and ending with the
realization that what politicians describe as “the safety net,” while imperfect
and flawed, is much better than the alternative. Running through the story is a
constant refrain of the power of words, for both good and bad, which gives
insight into why Hammaker gravitated towards the writer’s life.
FYI:
Some adult
content.
Format/Typo Issues:
No significant
issues.
Rating: ***** Five stars
1 comment:
I have seen many people asking to have a follow up to Shana's real life adventures in The Cookie Dumpster and this book won't let them down.
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