• Splinters

  • Another Kind of Love Story
  • By: Leslie Jamison
  • Narrated by: Leslie Jamison
  • Length: 8 hrs and 32 mins
  • 4.6 out of 5 stars (35 ratings)

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Splinters  By  cover art

Splinters

By: Leslie Jamison
Narrated by: Leslie Jamison
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Publisher's summary

From the New York Times bestselling author of The Recovering and The Empathy Exams comes the riveting story of rebuilding a life after the end of a marriage—an exploration of motherhood, art, and new love.

Leslie Jamison has become one of our most beloved contemporary voices, a scribe of the real, the true, the complex. She has been compared to Joan Didion and Susan Sontag, acclaimed for her powerful thinking, deep feeling, and electric prose. But while Jamison has never shied away from challenging material—scouring her own psyche and digging into our most unanswerable questions across four books—Splinters enters a new realm.

In her first memoir, Jamison turns her unrivaled powers of perception on some of the most intimate relationships of her life: her consuming love for her young daughter, a ruptured marriage once swollen with hope, and the shaping legacy of her own parents’ complicated bond. In examining what it means for a woman to be many things at once—a mother, an artist, a teacher, a lover—Jamison places the magical and the mundane side by side in surprising ways: pumping breastmilk in a shared university office, driving the open highway in the throes of new love, growing a tender second skin of consciousness as she watches her daughter come alive to the world. The result is a work of nonfiction like no other, an almost impossibly deep reckoning with the muchness of life and art, and a book that grieves the departure of one love even as it celebrates the arrival of another.

How do we move forward into joy when we are haunted by loss? How do we claim hope alongside the harm we’ve caused? A memoir for which the very term tour de force seems to have been coined, Splinters plumbs these and other pressing questions with writing that is revelatory to the last word. Jamison has delivered a book with the linguistic daring and emotional acuity that made The Empathy Exams and The Recovering instant classics, even as she reaches new depths of understanding, piercing the reader to the core. A master of nonfiction, she evinces once again her ability to “stitch together the intellectual and the emotional with the finesse of a crackerjack surgeon” (NPR).

©2024 Leslie Jamison (P)2024 Little, Brown & Company

Critic reviews

“Leslie Jamison’s blazing memoir kept me riveted for the single day it took to guzzle it down. This wry, hilarious, and utterly unputdownable book is a gift that feels like an immediate hit and a forever classic.”—Mary Karr, New York Times bestselling author of Lit and The Liar’s Club

Splinters is as sharp and piercing as its title—a brilliant reckoning with what it means to make art, a self, a family, a life. If I were offered one guide as a writer, as a mother, as a teacher, as a human being constantly reinventing herself out of necessity, I’d want that guide to be Leslie Jamison. This memoir is a masterclass.”—Maggie Smith, New York Times bestselling author of You Could Make This Place Beautiful

“In Splinters, Jamison offers a riveting portrait of rupture that is at once a page-turner about divorce, a romance about parenthood, a mystery of self after splintering, and a promise that however many times we break or are broken, art and love will never fail to mend us.”—Melissa Febos, author of the National Book Critics Circle Award winner and national bestseller Girlhood

Editorial Review

A new kind of family memoir
As a long-time lover of essays penned by women (think Joan Didion, Jia Tolentino, Roxane Gay, and so many more) I became an immediate fan of Leslie Jamison and her luminous, world-broadening collections Make It Scream, Make It Burn and The Empathy Exams. Splinters: Another Kind of Love Story is her first memoir, and in it, she brings an almost shocking candidness to what could have otherwise been a cut-and-dried tale of love and loss. As she simultaneously falls in love with her newborn daughter and out of love with her husband, Jamison develops a unique reckoning with "fairy tales with unhappy endings," which she wrote as a child. How does one balance an all-consuming love for a child with the heartbreak, betrayal, and devastation of divorce? How does our parents’ experience of love influence our own? Jamison’s narration is also superb, telling her story as a friend would over coffee, recounting the grand-yet-ordinary moments of life. — Audible Editor, Sarah U.

What listeners say about Splinters

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    4 out of 5 stars

Excellent writing that draws you in

This book caught my attention through the very beginning. The story is written in a raw, very honest or transparent manner.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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A wonderful and captivating story

This couldn’t have spoken to me more. The narration is nice and it’s a pleasant listen.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Amazing

Such a gorgeously-written book about struggling with a life that is not as you planned. Jamison is the master of the perfect simile

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Spoke my soul

How astounding to feel like a book so accurately reflects the depths of my heart, beautiful and poetic

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Navigating motherhood, divorce and grief

In Splinters, Leslie Jamison navigates loss and grief with raw honesty. She writes with depth, clarity, and emotional acuity, balancing humor with quiet devastation.

As both author and narrator, Leslie Jamison brings an intimate and authentic voice to the audio version of her work. Listeners have the opportunity to experience the emotional depth of her memoir firsthand.

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Masterful writing

Beautiful use of words. I liked the story but even more than that, I thought the writing itself was wonderful.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Wanted to love it. Didn’t.

Liked her specificity. Her details. But how many times can we smell her baby’s (breath, shit, food) etc, and hear about the fire trucks next door? The tension between her guilt and pleasure felt stretched too thin by the 20th metaphor about it. I really, really wanted to like it because I imagine the effort it took to excavate such painful memories that aren’t even memories yet. And I do love her sentences, so exquisitely constructed. But, so many anecdotes felt forced and made for highlighting in one of her classes.
She often wonders of others in the book (her lover, friends, parents) “why are you telling me this” and I found myself asking the same. I’d hoped the splintering would sharpen moments and memories, instead it felt repetitive by the end. Her walking into the ocean in the dress with a lover just felt too “made for an essay.” I believe her but she’s the author you cried “this is symbolic” one too many times. For such an intimate book, I was surprised by how I felt more removed from its narrator at the end.
This seems like a book for those in certain literary/academic subset who know the backstory and all its players.

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