Wet Earth and Dreams is more than a cancer journal . . . . Vulnerable and extremely private, Lazarre has entrusted her story to us. [This] is a moving book, crafted with exquisite care. I feel privileged to have read Lazarre's words. - Kathleen Woodward, The Women's Review of Books
Wet Earth and Dreams is a beautiful, engrossing, enormously moving book. It stirred me to the depths.-Judith Rossner
A book that cuts close to the bone, its strength derives from the purity of its engagement with the intensities of emotional life. . . . Lazarre's severe honesty is served by a perfected literary style of classical clarity and restraint. This is her best and most powerful work. . . . -Phillip Lopate, author of Portrait of My Body and The Art of the Personal Essay
A compelling read of one high risk woman's anticipation, realization, and emergence.-Deborah Axelrod, M.D., Beth Israel Medical Center
Bravely intimate . . . Jane Lazarre's voice sustains me through the terror of my own most grievous losses. . . . Her spiraling narrative, poetic or musical in its resonance, shows how grief that seemed a wall can become a door. Memory, that had seemed the enemy, becomes a source of plenitude and a companion in resurgence.-Jan Clausen, coeditor of Beyond Gay or Straight
Jane Lazarre has always been one of our bravest writers. She once again makes an art of raw, fierce honesty, as she moves through encounters with pain, loss, illness, and death. Inspired by the urgent desire to know and be known, she has created an intensely gripping and profoundly moving work.-Jessica Benjamin, author of The Bonds of Love and Shadow of the Other
She has it right! Perhaps even workers in the field will learn something about how patients feel. Thank you Jane Lazarre from all of us.-Lucille Clifton, author of The Terrible Stories
[Lazarre's] stream-of-consciousness narrative rescues the book from being just another story of illness. Although she deals with disease and sadness, she achieves the overall effect of healing, coming to terms with past losses and reclaiming wholeness. This book will appeal to women, especially those who have had experience with cancer. * Library Journal *
Wet Earth and Dreams is more than a cancer journal . . . . Vulnerable and extremely private, Lazarre has entrusted her story to us. [This] is a moving book, crafted with exquisite care. I feel privileged to have read Lazarre's words. -- Kathleen Woodward * Women's Review of Books *
This book is written with tremendous sensitivity. . . . [T]he author was very brave in writing it. . . . You get the feeling she has kept nothing back from the reader. * SHARE (Self-help for Women with Breast or Ovarian Cancer) *
Throughout the memoir, Lazarre returns to the most weighty issues of her adult life: psychic and physical separation from her mother; her intense, anxious attachment to her two sons; and her struggle to write. On each return, she learns more about the causes of her overwhelming fears, and eventually makes discoveries that free her of the leveling depression that had afflicted her before her diagnosis. . . . Wet Earth and Dreams' most memorable quality [is] Lazarre's refusal to accept stoicism as the ideal emotion for cancer patients. She dares to define a patient's bravery as the willingness to examine fear without banishing it. -- Angela Starita * Mamm *