The Snag: A Mother, a Forest, and Wild Grief

£16.95

Available for Pre-order. Due May 2025.
The Snag: A Mother, a Forest, and Wild Grief Author: Format: Hardback First Published: Published By: Scribe Publications
string(3) "320"
Pages: 320 Language: English ISBN: 9781915590985 Categories: , ,

Every day, we hear about and experience griefs, large and small, in our families, friendships, communities, and worldwide. The grief of a loved one passing. The grief of a way of life ceasing to exist. The grief of global pandemic, war, climate collapse. In The Snag, the acclaimed author of Shame On Me, Tessa McWatt, takes on personal and collective grief, and climate change, in her much-anticipated second nonfiction book. As her mother’s dementia advances and it becomes apparent that she can no longer live independently, Tessa considers griefs personal and political, and finds solace in trees. She asks: How do we grieve? And: What can we learn from nature and those whose communities are rooted in nature about how to grieve — and how to live? From the newest seedling, to the oldest snag in the forest, there is meaning to be found in every stage of a tree’s life, all of which contribute to a thriving forest community; it is in this metaphor that Tessa begins to find answers to her questions about how to live (for each other), how to grieve (radically), and how to die (with love and connection). The Snag is an essential book about living and dancing and singing and praying, even in the face of unimaginable sadness, and in this way, growing together and supporting one another, like the trees in the forest.

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‘In The Snag, Tessa McWatt dwells in powerful contradictions as she brings us along through her complex journeys of grief and joy across continents, offering multilayered and much-needed insight into connection and belonging beyond ourselves. Making the global intimate and the familial expansive, this book is a poignant lament for what we are losing and a call to care for what we have not yet lost.’ -- Kate Neville, author of Going to Seed ‘An extraordinary book — both a love song to the planet and reminder of how precious it is to be alive. Wise, bold, and deeply affecting, The Snag is an urgent plea for change.’ -- Stephanie Bishop, author of The Anniversary ‘The Snag is a radical ecosystem of a book. Love and loss, death and renewal, seeds and snags; the intimately personal and the globally political are all delicately balanced here. Tessa McWatt holds us unflinchingly close in this singular and universal story of a mother’s decline, and demands that we face up to the grief of all that we stand to lose in our collective planetary home’s demise.’ -- Marchelle Farrell, author of Uprooting ‘I love this book; it made me cry and hope and eventually be still. Tessa McWatt is simply one of the best writers available to us. I suggest you read this now.’ -- Leone Ross, author of This One Sky Day ‘Terrific. A beautiful meditation on grief, the power of nature, and how communities recover from loss. Tessa McWatt is a deeply compassionate talent.’ -- Irenosen Okojie, author of Hag ‘The Snag is a raw and deeply personal exploration of trauma, grief, and environmental destruction … A profound must-read text on the yearning for radical change.’ -- Victoria Pratt, Creative Director, Invisible Flock and Land Body Ecologies Praise for Shame on Me: ‘She is one of our greatest black female writers … She’s a deeply thoughtful woman and deeply radical in her thinking. She’s not on the fence about her politics.’ -- Monique Roffey * The Observer * Praise for Shame on Me: ‘Political, personal, intellectual, and critical.’ -- Bernardine Evaristo, author of Girl, Woman, Other Praise for Shame on Me: ‘Eloquent and moving.’ -- Barbara Taylor * The Guardian * Praise for Higher Ed: ‘Tessa McWatt brings the traditional campus novel bang up to date … This polyphonic novel owes an obvious debt to Zadie Smith’s White Teeth, but nevertheless [McWatt] manages to make this exuberant but bittersweet tale something all of her own.’ -- Lucy Scholes * The Observer *

Author Biography

Tessa McWatt is the author of seven novels and two books for young people. Her fiction has been nominated for the Governor General’s Award, the City of Toronto Book Awards, the OCM Bocas Prize, and the Society of Authors’ Volcano Prize. She is one of the winners of the Eccles British Library Award 2018, for her memoir: Shame on Me: an anatomy of race and belonging, which won the Bocas Prize for Non-Fiction 2020 and was shortlisted for the Hilary Weston Prize and the Governor General’s Award. She has been a resident at the Sacatar Institute in Brazil and the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center. Professor of Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia, she is also a librettist, and works on interdisciplinary projects and community-based life writing. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.