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A01=Kathleen Dorothy Blackburn
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Author_Kathleen Dorothy Blackburn
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=BM
Category=DNC
Category=RNK
Category=RNT
clean water
Coming-of-age
contaminated land
COP=United States
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
disease
Environmental justice
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eq_biography-true-stories
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Exposure
Faith
Family saga
Father-daughter story
Forever chemicals
Grief
Language_English
memory
Military history
PA=Available
PFAS
Price_€20 to €50
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reckoning
Slow-moving environmental harm
softlaunch
toxicity
Voice-driven
West Texas
Wildcatter religion

Product details

  • ISBN 9781477329627
  • Weight: 426g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Apr 2024
  • Publisher: University of Texas Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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An arresting memoir of love and unbending religion, toxicity and disease, and one family’s desperate wait for a miracle that never came.

Kathleen Dorothy Blackburn was the oldest of five children, a twelve-year-old from Lubbock, Texas, whose evangelical family eschewed public education for homeschooling, and wove improbable scientific theories into literal interpretations of the Bible. Then her father, a former air force pilot, was diagnosed with cancer at the age of thirty-eight, and, “it was like throwing gasoline on the Holy Spirit.” Stirred by her mother, the family committed to an extreme diet and sought deliverance from equally extreme sources: a traveling tent preacher, a Malaysian holy man, a local faith-healer who led services called “Miracles on 34th Street.”

What they didn’t know at the time was that their lives were entangled with a larger, less visible environmental catastrophe. Fire-fighting foams containing carcinogenic compounds had contaminated the drinking water of every military site where her father worked. Commonly referred to as “forever chemicals,” the presence of PFAS in West Texas besieged a landscape already burdened with vanishing water, taking up residence in wells and in the bloodstreams of people who lived there. An arresting portrait of the pernicious creep of decline, and a powerful cry for environmental justice, Loose of Earth captures the desperate futility and unbending religious faith that devastated a family, leaving them waiting for a miracle that would never come.

Kathleen Dorothy Blackburn teaches in the University of Chicago Creative Writing Program. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee whose work has appeared in Colorado Review, Guernica, Gulf Coast, Pleiades, and swamp pink, and was listed as notable in Best American Essays.

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