From the bestselling author of The Vagina Monologues--a powerful, life-changing examination of abuse and atonement.
Eve Ensler is a Tony Award–winning playwright, author, performer, and activist. She is the author of The Vagina Monologues, which has been published in 48 languages and performed in more than 140 countries, the NYT bestseller I Am an Emotional Creature, and many more. She is the founder of V-Day, the global activist movement to end violence against women and girls, and One Billion Rising, the largest global mass action to end gender-based violence. She is a co-founder of the City of Joy, a revolutionary center for women survivors of violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. She is one of Newsweek’s “150 Women Who Changed the World” and the Guardian’s “100 Most Influential Women.” She lives in New York.
The Apology is more than a reckoning with a man long dead; it's a
healing exploration of how survivors can recover from sexual
abuse.
*USA Today, "Five Must-Read Books"*
For those men--the famous and the unknown--The Apology is a
blueprint of contrition.
*Ron Charles, The Washington Post*
The horrifying specificity of the abuse Ensler suffered is on full
display, but so, too, is a kind of searing analysis of patriarchy
as a whole.
*The Observer*
A remarkable book.
*Brian Lehrer, WNYC*
A bold act of imaginative empathy . . . an incredibly brave attempt
to make sense of what seems senseless.
*Sunday Times*
Best-selling author Eve Ensler's new book The Apology is a powerful
description of the apology that she needed to hear, but never did,
from her father, who sexually abused her as a young child.
*Psychology Today*
At every turn, this project is a lesson in how the real work of
atonement happens in the churn of the reckoning. The Apology shows
all of us how to take a body back by imagining its freedom. This
book is a gift to our collective liberation.
*BOMB magazine*
By reliving her own abuse through the eyes of her abuser, Ensler
creates a powerfully cathartic work that sheds light on the toll
that rape can take on one’s life. 5/5.
*BUST magazine*
Taut but heart-wrenching . . . The book is as much a powerful
reckoning for [Ensler’s] father as it is for certain endemic
strains of patriarchy that have necessitated that such characters
always exist.
*San Francisco Chronicle*
Profound, imaginative and devastating . . . Horrifying and
mesmerising in equal measure, both in its depth of inquiry and its
detail . . . There is a moving power and poetry to the prose that
rouses Arthur from his grave and holds him to account.
*The Guardian*
One of the most shatteringly brilliant books I have read. As soon
as I finished it, I read it again, and again, and again
(really).
*The Times*
Ensler's transfixing, appalling, revelatory, and cathartic
performance deepens her mission of transmuting her pain into
clarion stories that engender understanding, openness, healing, and
liberation . . . Daring and resounding.
*Booklist, starred review*
This imagined voice of an abusive father from the limbo of the
afterlife is as intimate as it is alarming, and in crafting a
letter one survivor may yearn for, Ensler taps into a broader
struggle, searching to hold perpetrators accountable . . . Those
seeking a greater understanding of psychological manipulation will
appreciate this potent examination.
*Kirkus*
This bold, brutal, and ultimately healing narrative by playwright
Ensler exposes the origin story of her ground-breaking play The
Vagina Monologues through searing reflections on incest and abuse .
. . A powerful and disturbing story that Ensler writes with grace
and aplomb.
*Publishers Weekly*
The scourge of sexual abuse is very much at the forefront of the
cultural conversation right now. The Apology promises to be a
potent and extraordinarily compassionate addition to it.
*Omnivoracious*
Playwright Ensler’s The Vagina Monologues debuted in 1996 and
became an international phenomenon, with women recounting their
stories about sexuality, genitalia, and body image. Now the
celebrated dramatist turns to prose in her slender fever dream of a
book to give herself something she couldn’t get any other way.
Assuming the voice of her late father, Ensler imagines his apology
for raping, molesting, and abusing her throughout her childhood and
conjures a reckoning with himself and what led him to these
atrocities. Between the lines, readers can understand that she is
coming to terms with her past and offering a blueprint for others
who identify with her story.
*National Book Review, 5 Hot Books*
A clear statement of accountability, self-reflective and wholly
remorseful. It looks at misogyny and the perpetrator’s roots, while
describing the kind of personal transformation required to make
sure he never offends again. It is, unfortunately, a fantasy but it
is also a potent exercise in empowerment.
*NOW Toronto "Best Books to Read this Summer"*
The geometry of toxic masculinity is contained within these pages.
I read this book, and it blew me the f*** away . . . A devastating
excavation of feelings, sadness, trauma . . . Powerful and
bold.
*Marc Maron, host of “WTF with Marc Maron”*
The Apology is profound and theatrical, literary and sometimes
funny, as all of Eve Ensler's work is, and it goes without saying,
it’s courageous, transformative, and yes--healing.
*Anne Lamott*
Wisdom and insight that will be passed around as long as there are
human hearts beating on this broken planet.
*Thandie Newton*
Accusation and punishment of the guilty is one critical step in
reckoning with abuse. Eve Ensler offers another crucial step
forward: the deep self-reckoning and accounting that a true apology
requires. This is an urgently needed book right now.
*Jane Fonda*
In this triumph of artistry and empathy, Eve Ensler leaves us with
a transformative question: what if the words we most long to hear
from another can be located within ourselves? Navigating the rocky
rapids between intimacy and annihilation, contrition and
forgiveness, autonomy and interdependence, this is a book like no
other. Few will emerge unchanged.
*Naomi Klein*
As only she can, Eve Ensler shares the story of her father's
ultimate betrayal with both unflinching candor and immeasurable
grace. Through sheer creative force, she takes us on her own
journey to healing. Though Ensler's story is deeply personal, its
lessons are universal.
*Anita Hill*
The Apology is a brave step toward radical healing--not just for
Eve Ensler, but for all those who accept her invitation to confront
the trauma of sexual abuse and find the apology they might never
hear. But Ensler's book can also be seen as an invitation to men
and a roadmap for the apologies that need to be made.
*Tony Porter, CEO, A Call to Men*
This is one of the most original and profound books of the decade.
For anyone who has ever been hurt by somebody they love, it will be
deeply transformative. Twenty-five years ago, Eve Ensler
transformed how women think about their bodies. With this book, she
will change how all of us think about our souls.
*Johann Hari, author of CHASING THE SCREAM and LOST
CONNECTIONS*
Eve Ensler’s The Apology is both an excoriation and an act of
startling forgiveness. Even as it depicts jaw-dropping cruelties,
it probes the complexities and layers that underlie what could, in
lesser hands, appear as the opaque surface of pure evil. Eve Ensler
unflinchingly increases our understanding of the human experience
even at its darkest, which is quite possibly a writer’s, any
writer’s, most significant contribution.
*Michael Cunningham*
Eve Ensler's book is for people like me who find apologies to be
perfunctory and unsatisfying, even infuriating without a clear-eyed
reckoning of why the hurt was done. Here is a guide for those who
have not received the apology they deserve, and for those who know
there is one they've yet to give.
*Kimberlé Crenshaw*
Extraordinary . . . altogether magnificent.
*Maria Popova*
Probably the most important piece of political theater of the last
decade.
*New York Times on THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES*
No recent hour of theater has had a greater impact worldwide.
*The New York Times on THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES*
[An] extraordinary new memoir . . . a necessary book to read for
its fierce, passionate commitment to making the world a safe place
for women.
*The Boston Globe on IN THE BODY OF THE WORLD*
A masterpiece. Ensler has accomplished the impossible: weaving
together huge, bold, world-changing ideas with beautiful writing,
amazing metaphors, and original structure. Truly one of the most
courageous and original works of our time.
*Naomi Klein on IN THE BODY OF THE WORLD*
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