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Life Breaks In

A Mood Almanack

With a Portfolio by Rosamond Purcell
 
Some books start at point A, take you by the hand, and carefully walk you to point B, and on and on.
 
This is not one of those books. This book is about mood, and how it works in and with us as complicated, imperfectly self-knowing beings existing in a world that impinges and infringes on us, but also regularly suffuses us with beauty and joy and wonder. You don’t write that book as a linear progression—you write it as a living, breathing, richly associative, and, crucially, active, investigation. Or at least you do if you’re as smart and inventive as Mary Cappello.
 
What is a mood? How do we think about and understand and describe moods and their endless shadings? What do they do to and for us, and how can we actively generate or alter them? These are all questions Cappello takes up as she explores mood in all its manifestations: we travel with her from the childhood tables of “arts and crafts” to mood rooms and reading rooms, forgotten natural history museums and 3-D View-Master fairytale tableaux; from the shifting palette of clouds and weather to the music that defines us and the voices that carry us.  The result is a book as brilliantly unclassifiable as mood itself, blue and green and bright and beautiful, funny and sympathetic, as powerfully investigative as it is richly contemplative.
 
“I’m one of those people who mistrusts a really good mood,” Cappello writes early on. If that made you nod in recognition, well, maybe you’re one of Mary Cappello’s people; you owe it to yourself to crack Life Breaks In and see for sure.

408 pages | 8 color plates, 13 halftones, 1 map, 34 figures | 6 x 9 | © 2016

Art: Art--General Studies

Cognitive Science: General Works

Culture Studies

History of Science

Literature and Literary Criticism: General Criticism and Critical Theory

Reviews

"In these captivating essays, which meld memoir, philosophical meditations, and reports from excursions far, deeply interior, and wide, Cappello explores the abstract, amorphous notion of mood. . . . Cappello's fresh inquisitiveness and surprising trains of thought may well remind readers of the ruminative writings of Adam Phillips or Alain de Botton. An illuminating celebration of enveloping moments of being."
 

Kirkus Reviews, starred review

"A book to set your imagination ablaze. . . . Cappello's writing is lyrical and poignant; she makes you shiver. . . .  That’s not to say, though, that the only mood here is melancholy; even though she has trouble trusting genuine happiness, Cappello grows to embrace it. Like she might say, 'This is art that gets under your skin.'"

Brit + Co

"Cappello . . . has made a habit of calling our attention to states of being that are too often unremarked. . . . Formally, Life Breaks In is full of play; it is, as the subtitle suggests, an almanac of erudite and autobiographically playful dances around the possibility of what mood might be. . . . Cappello is both amusing and self-effacing, despite the high-wire choreography of combining source material and speculation, lyrical riffs and serious scholarship. . . . Life Breaks In is a book of many moods, certainly. It is also a tour de grace of scholarship, formal invention, and the discovery of hidden corners of emotional articulation: cloud rooms."
 

The Berlin Journal

“Cappello's new collection of essays is a 300-page thought experiment on mood, but calling it a collection doesn’t do justice to the scope of Cappello’s project. These essays don’t merely play off one another. They are distinct, stand-alone attempts at describing the often ineffable nature and origin of mood, part and parcel of one another—--much the way that moods themselves are distinct and unique, but collectively make up the reality of who we are. . . . Near the beginning of Life Breaks In, Cappello claims, 'in order to write or make art one must be in love, not with an individual per se, but with life itself.' And it may be Cappello's passion that comes through most clearly in this book--a passion wide enough and deep enough to encompass life and all its many moods."

Brevity Magazine

"I'm tempted to begin by comparing Mary Cappello to other contemporary literary nonfiction writers who meld memory and lyric impression with intellectual passion. Writers who come to mind--Rebecca Solnit, Maggie Nelson, Wayne Koestenbaum, bell hooks--certainly share borderlines and affinities, but none of their works really resemble the books that come of Cappello's singular voice and lens. Cappello’s compositions are at once sonic memoir, embodied criticism, and narrative cultural observation, drawing the attentive reader into what we might call the queer corporeal idea. . . . Cappello's new book, Life Breaks In, is at once rhapsodic, sensate, and intellectually captivating. . . . Reading Life Breaks In is, indeed, a kind of listening. It is time spent in a language-made listening room, a stroll into shifting human emotive time, a resounding of memory, imagination, story, and thought."
 

Los Angeles Review of Books

"The motley, nervous, intermittently brilliant oeuvre of Cappello swarms and stuns the reader. . . . The infinite play of non-knowledge, of knowing that she doesn’t know, continues to write with her and write for her, with a suspenseful, tumultuous virtuosity. . . . Cappello’s willfully transitional prose resembles the famished mongrel offspring of Virginia Woolf and Walter Benjamin, pleased to survey, infer, surmise, lollygag, slurp, and ransack in the mind. . . . Her ability to invoke the infinitesimally physical raptures of completing a thought, or a tremble of thoughts, recommends Cappello as a most unusual stylist, both emotive and cerebral, and unwilling to compromise at all, ever. . . . I am convinced that Montaigne would have liked it very much.”
 

Molly McQuade | Yale Review

"I loved this book. To wonder about the nature of the mood rooms people wander in, to attempt at access, and to see if they are anything like our own, is a fascinating study. Cappello has opened the backdoor to uncharted territory, a subdued though inescapable realm, that ranging spectrum of mood that each of us undergoes every day. In our world 'parsed by territories, psychic and bodily, political and aesthetic, imaginary and real, circumscribed and vast,' these invisible (psycho-emotional) containers we choose to live in are precious, volatile things. Wooden boats in a sea fraught with storms. And to better navigate the world’s moody waters, you would do well to explore the passage of Cappello's Life Breaks In, for it might just give you the insight you need to find shore, if but for a moment."

New Pages

"The book's real gift is how it talks about mood and the urgency of the creative task. The challenge to capture the ever-shifting world of mood when the physical world is always encroaching is worthy because the result is art, which has the ability to evoke a certain particular mood in others. . . . I admired that Life Breaks In didn’t mind having more questions than answers, and that it allowed me to sit inside that space for a while before my life broke back in."

Hippocampus

"Life Breaks In celebrates the intangible, investigating the place where interiority and exteriority meet, the mental space where the past ebbs into the present, weaving sense memory, cultural history, and personal recollection by connecting private and public moments in the experience of everyday reality. If tone is everything, this ambitious, humorous, yet serious creative-nonfiction study of mood is a necessary book for our time. . . . Creating an alternative to the impoverished mandate of our daily lives, the aesthetic challenge of Life Breaks In is not to explain or define mood but to notice it without killing it in the process."

American Book Review

"Cappello's cirrus-wisps of thought may offer a means of glimpsing that elusive entity, [the soul,] allowing it to liveprecisely because they fail to entirely capture it: the inexpressible contained, as Wittgenstein wrote, inexpressibly in the expressed."

Times Literary Supplement

"Are we sometimes not astonished by the beautiful futility of encountering some sudden fugitive moment that renders us so vulnerable to 'unanticipated forms': of perhaps an inner light or an inner dark? Here, with Mary Cappello's ravishing prose, lies a vibrating scalpel that intricately parts the belly of little swirling vertigos that we have no name for but know so deeply."
 

The Brothers Quay

"Life Breaks In encourages the reader to look, feel, and think more deeply, to linger and look again. Cappello's book is unpredictable. There's no sense of having read this before, or of being lulled by the reinforcement of long-held beliefs; this is--as its title would suggest--a disruptive work. Cappello's voice and approach are original and--again--in no way oriented toward 'cure.' This is indeed a book for the adventurous reader. Cappello's warmth and wry humor make the challenge approachable and inspire confidence that the payoff will more than equal the effort. At heart, Life Breaks In is not solely about mood. Cappello's book is, most deeply, a meditation on what it is to be alive in the world."
 

Dawn Raffel, author of The Secret Life of Objects

"Life Breaks In makes me think of the workings of big minds like Anne Carson's, Carole Maso's, or Susan Howe's (e.g. My Emily Dickinson), all relentlessly curious and similarly fearless, all four writers irrepressible masters at their craft, creating full-immersion experiences for any reader willing to go on the journey. The pleasures for me were both aesthetic, in how original and fine the writing, and esoteric, in how much I learned. Mary Cappello is a brilliant and exuberant original."

Catherine Reid, author of Falling into Place

"Mary Cappello's imagination is an idea accelerator dedicated to the continual astonishment called our world. It exhibits a fierce curiosity about everything, a will to cheer before the surprising juxtaposition, the sudden linkage, the creation of genre fusion that includes (but is hardly limited to) meticulously researched and wide-ranging cultural history, theory, esoterica, song lyrics, and personal recollections. The result is splendidly associative, revealing, humorous, poignant, eccentric, nuanced, and nothing if not beautifully self-aware. In Life Breaks In: A Mood Almanack, Cappello informs us 'Kenneth Goldsmith calls Facebook status lines "mood blasts."' Every paragraph of Life Breaks In is a Think Blast, and great pleasure to follow into its marvels."

Lance Olsen, author of Architectures of Possibility

"Trained as a poet, writing in the in-between state genre known as literary nonfiction, Mary Cappello has called the essay, after Gertrude Stein, 'a kind of writing that doesn't aim.'  Mary's essays tune us in to a vibrational register, to the timbre or power to touch us shared alike by things, words, places, persons, and narratives. Cappello's language grazes the circumstances of ongoing life: it echoes and echo-locates in the midst of surroundings. Just like mood, but a mood that (following Montaigne) puts our thought 'in apprenticeship and on trial,'these essays refuse to be contained."
 

Jonathan Skinner, Warwick University

"Learned, rigorous, and at times intimate and devastating."

Julija Sukys

Table of Contents

On the Street Where You Live

Elements
Mood of Perfect Kinship
Mood Modulations
Of Clouds and Moods
Gong Bath
Sonophoto: Boy Screaming

Charts
Is It Possible to Die of a Feeling?
The Flower Inclines toward Blue
They’re Playing Our Song
Mood Questionnaire
In a Studious Mood

Rooms
Life Breaks In
Mood Rooms
Miniature Verandas and Voluminous Velvet Forms
Synesthesia for Orphaned Boys
Picture Books

Vibes
Mood Telephony
The Tic-Tic-Tic of a Dime Hitting the Floor
Sounding Repetitions
The Sounds That Seals Make
The Exciting or Opiatic Effect of Certain Words
Arrangement for Voice and Interiors
Sonorous Envelopes

Acknowledgments
Notes and Sources
Playlist of Music or Sound Works (With Links to YouTube Recordings)
Photo Credits and Content Descriptions
Index
 

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