Cutting Apples

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Pub Date Nov 11 2022 | Archive Date Feb 09 2024

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Description

Written amidst the Covid-19 pandemic, Cutting Apples is a memoir which examines life through an intimate stream of consciousness. Jomé Rain wanders mentally across topics such as her relationship with her mother, sex work, the end of a friendship, music, love, mental health, and the inner monologue that dictates how one navigates their world.

CW - domestic violence, thoughts of suicide

Written amidst the Covid-19 pandemic, Cutting Apples is a memoir which examines life through an intimate stream of consciousness. Jomé Rain wanders mentally across topics such as her relationship...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781959118008
PRICE $15.00 (USD)
PAGES 90

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Average rating from 5 members


Featured Reviews

An intimate and emotional stream of consciousness.

It's impossible to stop reading it, as it feels like peaking into the room of a young person trying to focus on their feelings. Jomé reminiscences about her past loves, her present, her life and her mum.

Cutting Apples is extremely relatable and reminded me of myself at her age. 100% recommended.
*Received through NetGalley

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Cutting Apples by Jome Rain is a jewel of a book. Rain's stream of consciousness writing style may at first seem like an odd approach for a memoir, but it is perfect for this piece, one that was written during an odd time as the world struggled to make sense of COVID-19. Rain's memoir is written as an undated, ongoing letter to an unnamed love, a love not quite lost, but you feel the fragility of this relationship. Rain allows herself to be vulnerable, she tells her readers her fears, her heartaches, her insecurities and her hopes. She invites readers to witness a very personal analysis of her relationship with her mother; I found this quite affecting in its complete oppositeness to my own relationship with my mother. In reading Rain's memoir, I was driven to my own contemplation of the relationships in my life. Therein lies the power of this memoir, I think. Jome Rain has crafted an engaging book, opening herself to strangers to see her most private thoughts, and causing them to step away and look within themselves. I have read few memoirs that have caused me to do this. I cannot recommend this book enough. You will find yourself stopping to reread lines, to consider how they relate to your own experience. It will cause you to look within and consider what you have thought to be absolute.

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