
“Melora Wolff’s memoir in essays brings thrillingly to life the vanished New York of her childhood and adolescence in the 1970s, along with her beloved parents and friends. In glorious prose, Wolff conjures textures, ideals, and emotions―from a girl’s early experience of joy to a city’s rampant paranoia and the eager futurism of Lost in Space. Bequeath is a beautiful, memorable book.”
— Claire Messud, author of Kant’s Little Prussian Head and Other Reasons Why I Write: An Autobiography in Essays
“These magical essays shimmer with tenderness and regret, with sensuous allusion, joy, self-deprecating humor, and wry intelligence. The memories are so successfully evoked that the question then becomes: Does the present stand a chance, now that the past has been recaptured?”
— Phillip Lopate, author of A Year and a Day: An Experiment in Essays
“Bequeath is a collection that reads like a memoir, or even more: a succession of memoirs. Each essay here is as layered and fully rendered as a book. The voice is assured, the narrative movements as inevitable as they are unpredictable. Tracing the arc of a life and a family―her own―Wolff reminds us of all we know and all we never know, the insufficiency of memory and also its necessity.”
— David L. Ulin, author of Sidewalking: Coming to Terms with Los Angeles