Terese Marie Mailhot's memoir, "Heart Berries," is breaking big, winning endorsements from The New York Times and from Sherman Alexie, who met Mailhot at a writing ...
For somebody denied it their entire life, domestic drudgery can feel, in fact, like a dream. A short drive from the leafy American university where Terese Marie Mailhot is a post-doc fellow, past a ...
Mailhot summarizes his career as “32 years, seven companies, one desk.” Despite multiple companies on his resumé, Mailhot said he has never “job-hopped.” The companies he’s been with have changed ...
Heart Berries shook me to my core. It wasn't just the emotionally jarring, painful experiences shared by author Terese Marie Mailhot, from her youth on an Indian Reservation in British Columbia and ...
It took Terese Marie Mailhot four years to finish writing a single line about her father’s death. That line — "My father died at the Thunderbird Hotel on Flood Hope Road..." — can be found in her ...
Weighing in at just over 100 pages, Terese Mailhot's memoir 'Heart Berries” is light by industry standards, but don't be fooled: it might be the heaviest book you'll read all year. In these 11 essays, ...
Our January pick for the PBS NewsHour-New York Times book club “Now Read This” is Terese Marie Mailhot’s memoir “Heart Berries.” Become a member of the book club by joining our Facebook group, or by ...
There’s nothing conventional about Heart Berries, Terese Marie Mailhot’s debut. A little over 100 pages, it’s far short of the 80,000 words most memoirs need to be deemed viable. There’s barely any ...
Terese Marie Mailhot doesn’t own a passport. Travel was an unimaginable luxury growing up impoverished on the Seabird Island Reservation in British Columbia. But now with the runaway critical success ...