Guernica Magazine

On One’s Land

Kendra Atleework's memoir Miracle Country embraces a dangerous, and endangered, land.

I once asked my dad: If someone laid down on the pavement in Tucson on a July afternoon, how long could they survive? He said two, maybe three, hours. I’d never known a heat that could kill as quickly as the cold does in Boston, where I’m from. Dad grew up in Tucson. He knows both.

I followed his wake to Tucson for grad school last fall, and the heat broke my thoughts. I’d known to expect it, but there’s mind knowing, and there’s body knowing. At orientation, we stood outside during the session breaks. Most days, I bought a bottled water from the vending machine. I don’t usually buy water—wasteful—but I bought the condensation dripping off the plastic, the toothaching chill of the first gulp. I needed

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guernica Magazine

Guernica Magazine14 min read
The Chicken Line
What had these poor half-beasts done, besides exist in an ever-changing world that didn’t want to understand them?
Guernica Magazine5 min read
Al-Qahira
Growing up, your teachers always told you: “Al-Qahira taqharu’l I’ida.” Cairo vanquishes her enemies.
Guernica Magazine8 min read
The Glove
It’s hard to imagine history more irresistibly told than it is in The Swan’s Nest, Laura. McNeal’s novel about the love affair between two giants of nineteenth century poetry, Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett. Its contours are, surely, familiar

Related Books & Audiobooks