Quotes
“Narrator Renee Raudman is engaging…Raudman affects
a voice full of wonder for Peppe’s childhood self, an impatient and
disapproving tone for her harried mother, and a subtly wheedling tone for an
older man with a prurient interest in the preteen Helen. These vocal
characterizations help to distinguish the various characters.” AudioFile
“Peppe recounts a harrowing childhood as the youngest of nine children, by turns ignored, reprimanded, or bullied…Peppe’s past, like the book itself, is raw and brutally depicted from the perspective of a child trying to make sense of the world and her place in it.” Booklist
“A writer and photographer’s wry but poignant account of her hardscrabble childhood and adolescence in rural New England…Unsentimental in its character portrayals and forthright yet humorous in its depiction of devastated innocence and family dysfunction, Peppe’s book is a celebration of difference, resilience, and the healing power of love.”
Kirkus Reviews
“Pigs Can’t Swim is a marvelously funny, moving, and spirited memoir, likely destined to become a classic in the genre.” David Mura, author of Turning Japanese
“Pigs Can’t Swim is all that a memoir can be at its best: a clear-eyed, big-hearted testament to resilience, a rediscovery of what matters, an ode to life.” Richard Hoffman, author of Half the House: A Memoir
“An impressive and memorable debut.” Suzanne Strempek Shea, author of Selling the Lite of Heaven
“Even though Pigs Can’t Swim is a memoir
written by a grownup looking back, the unblemished trustworthiness as a
kid looking at it for the first time is right there, wide-open, hiding
nothing. I love this book.”
Carolyn Chute, author of The Beans of Egypt, Maine
“A bracingly honest account of a troubled rural childhood inside a large
New England family forced to scratch out a borderline existence on the
poverty line in the last house on a dead-end country road. The book is
brimming full of poignant human narratives that verge on the tragic,
vividly and expertly rendered, but it’s also filled with redemptive
accounts and empathetic love stories about the natural world and the
creature world—dogs, horses, pigs—those wide-eyed companions who
provide comfort along the way to those who are powerless to escape their
circumstances.” Debra Marquet, author of The Horizontal World: Growing Up Wild in the Middle of Nowhere