Tiffany Graham Charkosky’s writing explores love, human dynamics, and relationships. Her essays and short stories have been published in Gordon Square Review, Mutha Magazine, The Avalon Literary Review, and South Dakota Review. She lives in Northeast Ohio with her family and has worked in the arts for over twenty years.
Charkosky's new memoir is Living Proof: How Love Defied Genetic Legacy.
At Electric Lit the author tagged ten memoirs that take readers on a medical journey, including:
The Year of the Horses by Courtney MaumRead about another entry on Charkosky's list.
The Year of the Horses starts with Courtney Maum’s young daughter refusing to put on a sock. But a sock is never just a sock. This beautifulmetaphor of being in a life that doesn’t fit right catapults Maum’s journey to examine her growing feelings of depression. When standard medical care doesn’t offer the balm she needs, Maum seeks to remember a time when she felt as joyful as she did on the back of a horse as a child. This book moves back and forth through Maum’s challenging childhood and teen years and her grown-up desire to reclaim her sense of self. By introducing readers to the world of horsemanship, Maum shows us that sometimes wisdom isn’t always about growing older—it can be about giving our inner child (and animal) room to play.
--Marshal Zeringue
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