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No Visible Bruises

what we don’t know about domestic violence can kill us

Rachel Louise Snyder

No Visible Bruises
No Visible Bruises

No Visible Bruises

what we don’t know about domestic violence can kill us

Rachel Louise Snyder

Paperback | English
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€12.95
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Description

‘Clear, smooth and accessible … never folksy but never academic and so matter-of-fact you can feel the writer holding herself in check so as not to overwhelm us with painful details.’



‘Clear, smooth and accessible … never folksy but never academic and so matter-of-fact you can feel the writer holding herself in check so as not to overwhelm us with painful details.’



‘Powerful … No Visible Bruises is a call for action, not a cry of despair. Snyder has written not only an admirable book, but one that should spur change.’



No Visible Bruises is a seminal and breathtaking account of why home is the most dangerous place to be a woman. Through brilliant insights and myth-busting research, compelling storytelling, and a passionate focus on truth-telling, Rachel Louise Snyder places domestic violence exactly where it should be, smack in the centre of everything. A tour de force.’



‘Powerful … Snyder exposes this hidden crisis by combining her own careful analysis with deeply upsetting and thoughtfully told accounts of the victims … To her credit, Snyder takes seriously the underlying causes of violence, interviewing perpetrators and noting that many have often been victims themselves … [An] important book.’



‘A book that manages to be both personal and panoramic, angry and hopeful.’



‘This chilling, vital, and urgent book deserves to be read by everyone.’



‘This is terrifying, courageous reportage from our internal war zone, a fair and balanced telling of an unfair and unbalanced crisis in American family life. Snyder writes with stark lucidity and great compassion, and tells stories of utmost urgency with considerable narrative skill.’



‘Tightly paced, compelling, fascinating and heart-breaking in equal measures … The writing style is always clear and accessible as Snyder deftly dismantles myths around violence against women. It’s an extraordinary book that deserves to be widely read.’



‘Deeply impactful and thoroughly researched … a truly unique and beneficial account of abuse and its cultural context.’



‘An extraordinary book.’



‘Gut-wrenching, required reading.’



‘A passionately written, highly intelligent and lucid book … Snyder weaves compelling personal accounts through her deeply researched narrative … it’s literary non-fiction at its best, an authoritative, multi-dimensional work that melds hard-headed reporting with self-reflective analysis.’



‘Rachel Louise Snyder has uncompromising truths to tell about domestic violence.’



‘Compulsively readable … In a writing style that's as gripping as good fiction, as intimate as memoir and deeply informed, [Snyder] takes us into the lives of the abused, the abusers and the survivors … The stories are devastating, but Snyder keeps us reading by pointing us toward possible solutions … After a few chapters, I was telling a prosecutor friend that everyone in her office — no, everyone in the state who deals with family violence — had to read this book. Because it will save lives.’



'Snyder debunks pervasive myths and writes movingly about the lives (and deaths) of people on both sides of the equation. She doesn’t give easy answers but presents a wealth of information that is its own form of hope.’



‘A meticulous study of the often-overlooked risk factors for women being killed by current or former partners.’



‘A brilliant work … what makes it move with the suspense of a beach novel is Snyder's passionate storytelling, [which] often soars to the point of lyricism but remains unfailingly honest.’



‘Extraordinary … [No Visible Bruises] takes apart the myths that surround domestic violence … In its scope and seriousness — its palpable desire to spur change — this book invites reflection not only about violence but about writing itself … [Snyder] brings all of fiction's techniques to this new book — canny pacing, an eye for the animating detail and bursts of quick, confident characterisation. There is a fullness and density to every one of her subjects … She glides from history to the present day, from scene to analysis, with a relaxed virtuosity that filled me with admiration. This is a writer using every tool at her disposal to make this story come alive, to make it matter.’



‘This sympathetic look at victims, perpetrators, and intervention efforts by law enforcement and social agencies makes for compelling reading ... Snyder’s chilling body of evidence shows that domestic abuse is a pervasive epidemic that can and does happen everywhere.’



‘A powerful exploration of the sinister, insidious nature of domestic violence in America … Bracing and gut-wrenching, with slivers of hope throughout, this is exemplary, moving reportage on an important subject that often remains in the dark due to shame and/or fear.’ STARRED REVIEW



‘I cannot imagine how Rachel Louise Snyder had the strength to write this book — it’s like the journal of a war correspondent. By witnessing the toll of family violence, she wants to take public this private horror. No Visible Bruises is a keening for the battered and a shout of outrage for the lost, a case for the higher awareness that could make us better humans.’



No Visible Bruises snapped open my eyes to the direct link between patriarchal entitlement and violence against women, between the way men are raised to the way women are treated. From her dismantling of the term ‘domestic violence’, which not only couches a pervasive public menace in homey, private terms, but echoes a sick culture in denial, to her connecting the dots between acts of terror and acts of domestic terror, Snyder’s is an indispensable, important book.’



‘Snyder’s singular achievement is that she illuminates the dark corners of this spectre as a way to understand it and thus eliminate it.’



‘[Snyder] has written a book about everything about men who beat and kill their wives or girlfriends; about people who work to predict murder, and those who try to heal the abusers; and also, deeply, about gender, poverty, depression, despair, privilege, law enforcement, incarceration, justice, mental health, and politics … It takes a writer of uncommon talent and confidence to pull this off. Snyder's stories are about people, every single one of whom is drawn empathically. Her investigation is intellectual and unsparingly complex.’



‘Snyder [goes] both wide and deep … her empathy for the victims is powerful, and infectious. But so is her interest in the perpetrators, some of whom may be able to recover, to change and atone. And as she makes very clear, those who undertake reform — studying and quantifying risk, asking smart questions about whether women's shelters help or hurt, counseling survivors and getting them the support they need — are heroes.’



‘Should be required reading for lawmakers across the country.’



‘[A] powerful investigation into intimate partner abuse … with closely observed, compassionate portraits of victims, advocates, abusers and police. Penetrating and wise, and written in sometimes novelistic prose, Snyder's sobering analysis will reward readers' attention.’ STARRED REVIEW



‘A searing examination of domestic violence in the US’



‘Snyder's willingness to tell the intimate stories of domestic violence sheds light on an often neglected subject. All of us have a stake in becoming more aware of and responsive to private violence, and this book proves why.’ STARRED REVIEW



‘We can't afford not to be talking about domestic violence. Snyder argues that it has reached epidemic proportions in the country — it accounts for 15 percent of all violent crimes — with devastating effect. She combines her analysis with interviews with survivors, advocates, and occasionally, the perpetrators themselves.’



‘An incredible piece of reporting’



‘By focusing on case studies — individuals' stories — Snyder returns humanity to the horrifying larger issue … placing domestic violence in relationship to issues of economics, education, employment, the criminal justice system and other, more 'public' types of violence … No Visible Bruises speaks with urgency about solving a problem that, however invisible, affects us all. This thoroughly researched examination of the domestic violence epidemic is chilling but deeply important and surprisingly accessible.’



No Visible Bruises is a compelling account of the root causes of the domestic violence epidemic in the US and attempts to respond to it … an excellent read.’



‘It pains to read this latest work from American University professor and novelist Snyder … [W]hile graphic, this book is not gratuitous; rather, it illuminates the realities of domestic violence, working off the premise that instead of only targeting survivor recovery, our concern must be eradicating the behaviours of those who commit abuse … A compelling treatise on how domestic violence correlates with larger societal problems detracting from the quality of life for all genders.’



‘A meticulous study of the often-overlooked risk factors for women being killed by current or former partners.’



‘Snyder’s in-depth reporting and vivid writing imbue the book with drama and tension … A welcome addition to the efforts that bring this brutal crime out from behind closed doors and provide hope for the future.’



‘There is a compelling determination to Snyder’s writing as well as to her suggestion that if we tell these stories enough, that if we find the right way to tell them, then maybe someday we won't have to tell them anymore.’



‘Invaluable, deeply reported ... Snyder’s discussion ... regarding mass shootings, is particularly astonishing ... “Domestic violence is like no other crime,” Snyder writes, and by the time you finish this book, you will believe it ... Snyder is unsparing on the role of guns in our culture, acknowledging that the US is “the most dangerous developed country in the world for women.”’



‘Snyder provides a valuable tool for understanding domestic violence and for thinking about a way forward. In its mix of storytelling, cultural analysis, and skilled reporting, No Visible Bruises is an essential part of the ongoing conversation ... Before it all seems too bleak, Snyder manages to find some light ... With its harrowing stories and lack of easy answers, No Visible Bruises is a demanding read, even though Snyder’s prose and pacing carry it well. For many readers – and not only those new to these topics – the book will bring vital information and at least some hope. Our continuing culture of violence in general and of domestic violence in particular creates some grim situations, but advancement remains possible, first through knowledge and then through effective change. Snyder’s look at these matters should become an important part of that process.’



Praise for Fugitive Denim:

‘Contains a number of surprises about the most ubiquitous of clothes … Ultimately Snyder gets readers to think about the real costs of clothing, and it’s likely they won’t look at $30 or $200 jeans the same way again.’



Praise for What We've Lost Is Nothing:

‘Rachel Louise Snyder writes with the rigorous scrutiny of an investigative journalist and the deep and roving empathy of a natural-born novelist; the result is a bold and mesmerising exploration of daily truths we don't talk about nearly enough: class prejudice and racism; the chasm between newly arrived immigrants and those of us who've been here for generations; the painful division between husbands and wives and the children they've made; and that razored air between what we believe and what is. What We've Lost is Nothing is a stellar debut by an important and necessary new voice among us.’



Praise for What We've Lost Is Nothing:

‘Veteran journalist Snyder crafts a muscular and fearless debut novel that boldly tackles the heady themes of prejudice, self-preservation, poverty and privilege … Snyder's drama provocatively reveals the escalating tensions of a community about to implode.’



Rachel Louise Snyder is the author of Fugitive Denim, the novel What We’ve Lost is Nothing, and No Visible Bruises, winner of the J. Anthony Lukas Award, the Hillman Prize, and the Helen Bernstein Book Award for Excellence in Journalism, and finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, LA Times Book Prize, and Kirkus Prize. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times, Slate, and elsewhere. Snyder is a Professor of Creative Writing and Journalism at American University and a 2020–2021 Guggenheim Fellow. She lives in Washington, DC. 

Specifications

  • Publisher
    Scribe Publications
  • Pub date
    Mar 2020
  • Pages
    336
  • Theme
    Domestic abuse
  • Dimensions
    198 x 129 x 19 mm
  • EAN
    9781912854851
  • Paperback
    Paperback
  • Language
    English

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