Lisa Williamson Rosenberg Explores Race and Family in Mirror Me

 “Mirror Me is an exquisitely rendered meditation on race, family, and memory. With stylish prose and tender storytelling, Williamson Rosenberg explores what it means to have your identity divided at the root and ultimately answers the question we all have about where we truly belong.” 
Nancy Johnson, author of The Kindest Lie

Lisa Williamson Rosenberg is the author of Mirror Me and Embers on the Wind. She is a former ballet dancer and psychotherapist specializing in depression, developmental trauma, and multiracial identity. Her essays have appeared in Literary Hub, Longreads, Narratively, Mamalode, and The Common. Her fiction has been published in the Piltdown Review and in Literary Mama, where Lisa received a Pushcart nomination. A born-and-raised New Yorker and mother of two college students, Lisa now lives in Montclair, New Jersey, with her husband and dog.

Mirror Me is her second novel.

LISTEN

Episode 92 – Lisa Williamson Rosenberg, Mirror Me

Join Lissa and Lisa as they delve into subjects psycological and literary. Lisa Williamson Rosenberg is the author of Embers on the Wind and Mirror Me (Little A Publishing 2024). She is a former ballet dancer and psychotherapist specializing in depression, developmental trauma, and multiracial identity. Her essays have appeared in Literary Hub, Longreads, Narratively, Mamalode, and The Common.

Join Lissa and Lisa as they delve into subjects psychological and literary.

Synopsis: Eddie Asher arrives at Hudson Valley Psychiatric Hospital panicked that he may have murdered his brother’s fiancée, Lucy, with whom he shared a profound kinship. He can’t imagine doing such a terrible thing, but Eddie hasn’t been himself lately.

Eddie’s anxiety is nothing new to Pär, the one Eddie calls his Other, who protects Eddie from truths he’s too sensitive to face. Or so Pär says. Troubled by Pär’s increasing sway over his life, Eddie seeks out Dr. Richard Montgomery, a specialist in dissociative identities. The psychiatrist is Eddie’s best chance for piecing together the puzzle of what really happened to Lucy and to understanding his inexplicable memories of another man’s life.

But Montgomery’s methods trigger a kaleidoscope of memories that Pär can’t contain, bringing Eddie closer to an unimaginable truth about his identity.

GO DEEPER

Lisa talks about her own artistic influences, including Elizabeth Catlett, Charles White and Romare Bearden, and how they appear in her characters’ experience.

Romare Bearden

Romare Bearden’s works, which addressed topics ranging from Greek mythology to jazz, redefined representations of the Black experience, centering and revealing the interconnectivity between Black life in the United States, Africa, and the Caribbean.

What is Lisa Reading?

With audacity and invention, Jason Mott’s Hell of a Book weaves together three narrative strands—an unnamed author, a boy named Soot, and a figure known as The Kid—into a masterful novel. In a structurally and conceptually daring examination of art, fame, family and being Black in America, Mott somehow manages the impossible trick of being playful, insightful and deeply moving, all at the same time. A highly original, inspired work that breaks new ground.

Spanning three continents and eight generations, Yaa Gyasi‘s critically acclaimed, debut novel Homegoing begins with two Ghanaian sisters in the 18th century who lead parallel, yet divergent lives: one stays in Ghana and becomes a wealthy slave trader’s wife; one is sold into slavery and sent to America.

Enjoy!

Thank you for joining us for this episode of Black Market Reads: On Health as we kick off our 10th Season! Please subscribe and listen to all our past episodes, and READ!

Our production team for this episode includes co producers/ Lissa Jones and Edie French, technical director/Paul Auguston, The Voice/Yo Derek, and our artist of inspiration/Ta-coumba T. Aiken. Our co-host Bukata Hayes is traveling this month. We thank Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota for supporting On Health focusing on the intersection of health, race, and culture.

Black Market Reads: On Health is a collaboration with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota, as part of Blue Cross’ long-term commitment to improving the health of Minnesota communities and ensuring that all people have opportunities to live the healthiest lives possible. 

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Black Market Reads

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading