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Reading the Waves: A Memoir

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The frank and revealing memoir of a writer who draws from her own creativity to heal.

"I believe our bodies are carriers of experience," Lidia Yuknavitch writes in her provocative memoir Reading the Waves. "I mean to ask if there is a way to read my own past differently, using what I have learned from how stories repeat and reverberate and release us from the tyranny of our mistakes, our traumas, and our confusions."

Drawing on her background -- her father's abuse, her complicated dynamic with her disabled mother, the death of her child, her sexual relationships with men and women -- and her creative life as an author and teacher, Yuknavitch has come to understand that by using the power of literature and storytelling to reframe her memories, she can loosen the bonds that have enslaved her emotional growth. Armed with this insight, she allows herself to look with the eye of an artist at the wounds she suffered and come to understand the transformational power this has to restore her soul. 

By turns candid and lyrical, stoic and forgiving, blunt and evocative, Reading the Waves reframes memory to show how crucial this process  can be to gaining a deeper understanding of ourselves.

224 pages, Hardcover

First published February 4, 2025

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5543 people want to read

About the author

Lidia Yuknavitch

43 books2,405 followers
Lidia Yuknavitch is the author of the National Bestselling novels The Book of Joan and The Small Backs of Children, winner of the 2016 Oregon Book Award's Ken Kesey Award for Fiction as well as the Reader's Choice Award, and the novel Dora: A Headcase, Her widely acclaimed memoir The Chronology of Water was a finalist for a PEN Center USA award for creative nonfiction and winner of a PNBA Award and the Oregon Book Award Reader's Choice. Her nonfiction book based on her TED Talk, The Misfit's Manifesto, is forthcoming from TED Books.

She founded the workshop series Corporeal Writing in Portland Oregon, where she teaches both in person and online. She received her doctorate in Literature from the University of Oregon. She lives in Oregon with her husband Andy Mingo and their renaissance man son, Miles. She is a very good swimmer.

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5 stars
237 (47%)
4 stars
156 (31%)
3 stars
68 (13%)
2 stars
36 (7%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 107 reviews
Profile Image for Andy Pronti.
161 reviews18 followers
August 20, 2024
I’m not sure how much more I can praise Lidia Yuknavitch. This was excellent. It felt like we picked right up where The Chronology of Water left off and continued to learn and grow. I will follow Lidia Yuknavitch to the ends of the earth, ends of a self, a new beginning, a new story.
Profile Image for Danika at The Lesbrary.
690 reviews1,621 followers
February 2, 2025
The relationship between memory and story is something that’s always fascinated me; I have a terrible memory and also experience the world first through story. So, I was hooked from the beginning, which describes how memory is iterative and remembering is an act of storytelling—”Anything that can be put to story can be storied differently.” She pulls in threads from many other writers, including Virginia Woolf and Toni Morrison, to describe how this book is a way of laying down memories that are too heavy to carry forward.

These are heavy stories. I want to give content warnings for suicide, the death of a child, child sexual assault, rape, murder, ableism, homophobia, parental abuse, and domestic violence. These are not mentioned in passing: the majority of the book is dealing with these topics, and I will be discussing them more in this review.

While the subject matter is dark, the beautiful writing kept me entirely engrossed. There are also fairy tale-like interludes that feel part fantasy, part memoir, part poetry. This is a story about running toward self-destruction, but it’s made easier to handle knowing that it’s written from a very different time in her life.

Full review at the Lesbrary.
Profile Image for emily.
603 reviews522 followers
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August 22, 2025
‘These pages show you how I read my own embodied past, how I imagine a map for myself that loosens the grip that sorrow has on my soul without erasing my experiences, and how the map moves. I understand I cannot make a map for you—you have to retrieve the important particles from your own life that will help you story, destroy, and restore your life, and create your own map. At the interstices of our lives, we trade stories and secrets, we take turns helping each other go on. May these shared moments and rituals for release and revivification raise your own sweet solaces.’

(UPDATE) After allowing my thoughts to simmer through over the weekend, I now feel quite differently about it (than my (below) first impressions at least) — I think The Chronology of Water holds/reads better (for me). Browsed my old copy and was more drawn towards the notes/highlights I made in that one. As other readers have written and/or nuanced, this one feels like a sequel to TCoW, which in some ways is surely true, inevitably, considering it's a memoir. Both explore life/death and love/grief at its core, but this one leans more towards the writer’s sentiments in relation to an ex-lover (who seem to have taken ‘matters’ into his own hands), and the previous one goes deeper into the grief of ‘losing’ a daughter (in which nothing could’ve been done to ‘prevent’).

‘Smell kelp and taste salt; feel that underwater animals have brushed near you. Remember parts of your body are scattered in water all over the earth. Know land is made from you—Have endless patterns and repetitions accompanying your thoughtlessness, as if to say let go of that other more linear story, with its beginning, middle, and end, with its transcendent end, let go, we are the poem, we have come miles of life, we have survived this far to tell you, go on, go on. You will see you have an underlying tone and plot to your life underneath the one you’ve been told. Circular and image bound. Something near tragic, near unbearable, but contained by your irreducible imagination—who would have thought of it but you— your ability to metamorphose like organic material in contact with changing elements. The rocks. They carry the chronology of water. All things simultaneously living and dead in your hands.’ (from TCoW)


Another difference (between the earlier text and the latest one) being the structure of the texts — the previous one felt less edited/meddled with somehow (though I wouldn't know if that was truly the case, it just ‘feels’ like so — it just has a certain ‘rawness’ to it that feels like it was deliberately left that way without any obligation/need for it to be ‘made-presentable’). This one feels ‘cleaner’, with a slight stifling feeling that feels like stoicism or rather forced-stoicism (but compensates with an endearing tenderness of someone who has ‘lived more’ (for the lack of a better phrase)). But regardless, I thought the writers referenced/quoted in this one were very fab choices (Clarice Lispector, Virginia Woolf, Getrude Stein, Jeanette Winterson (to name a few)) . And with everything ‘said’, I’d still recommend anyone to read both anyway — both rather than one for a fuller experience. If anything it’s interesting to ‘see’ what ‘changed’ and what remains ‘constant’ in the writer’s life.



(FIRST IMPRESSIONS) This, I like far more than Yuknavitch's other one, The Chronology of Water, but it still felt a little repetitive towards the end (subjective feeling, etc.), and the same kinds of 'water' analogies/metaphors also felt over-used somehow. In any case, well-written overall, and I probably won't 'rate' it because it's a personal memoir, but if counts for anything (probably doesn't but) I read it all from cover to cover quite quickly - not quite the one for me, but still very pleased to have read it. The first third/half is very 'engaging' (for the lack of a better word), but the second half kind of mirrors it - and it felt a bit like reading the same thing over and over again (not sure if this was the intended 'stylistic' choice? Did the writer do it for the 'vibes' sort of thing?).

‘Narrative is a shapeshifting space — carries with it the possibility of arrangement, de-arrangement, and rearrangement, as does language itself. If I step back into a story I have been carrying in my body about my experiences, it is possible to change the point of view, it is possible to curate the elements of the story differently, bring different themes or images forward or let them recede — I’m talking about what we do with events in our lives. We story them and try to learn to live with them. Anything that can be put to story can be storied differently. Ask any member of a family about a holiday dinner and you will get a different story. One of the greatest transmographical spaces we experience in life happens at the level of memory. Memories are conjurings.

At the same time, memory is a mind-fuck. It doesn’t give a shit what you think about it. Memory slingshots you back and sideways. It interrupts time whether you like it or not, usually through your body. A sound, a smell, an image, and your body becomes a quivering wobble.’
Profile Image for Anna.
1,056 reviews815 followers
June 23, 2025
I believe that memory inside the brain and memory as we experience it as a storytelling field carries within it tiny interstices or flash points where more than one meaning is available. In some ways I have come to think of memory as oceanic or like space. The way it stretches out or contracts. We enter into that fluid, vast space and locate moments that we use to create narratives that sustain us. We carry our memory pieces in our actual bodies. I often wonder what memory pieces we may be carrying from before we were born.
Profile Image for Miriam Hall.
290 reviews19 followers
March 27, 2025
Powerful. Healing and healed. Yuknavitch’s first memoir ripped its way through my writing community - it was potent and also triggering as hell. This one has a lot of the same vivid intensity but it’s - grounded. You can tell she’s done a lot of processing and work.
Profile Image for Kailyn.
213 reviews3 followers
May 16, 2025
4.5. I love Lidia Yuknavitch's insights. They're a privilege to read.
Profile Image for Dana.
143 reviews9 followers
July 30, 2025
i think lidia lives inside my brain. hey girl!
Profile Image for Cynthia.
409 reviews7 followers
March 15, 2025
I really enjoyed the author's memoir and would like to get the book so I can read it rather than listen to it as I did. Her writing can be very poetic and intentionally repetitive--or, as she reminds us that Gertrude Stein said, there's no such things as repetition, but insistence. Insist she does--on her reader/listener knowing that one of her mother's legs was 6" shorter than the other, or that her former husband committed suicide, or that she is a strong swimmer. These sound like a cross between mundanity and Flannery O'Connor, and there is something of the both in this memoir, and yet it is compelling. Her writing bears reading, however, and I will update this after I have a chance to read rather than listening while driving which distracts too much from the attention to the lines that I want to insist on knowing better.
Profile Image for lola.
239 reviews97 followers
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March 21, 2025
Good book. Finished save single page in “sub” chapter which prompted me to say out loud to an empty room “she still has the rock? WHAT? ITS A REAL ROCK?" didn’t finish that page but rest of book, finished
Profile Image for Charlotte.
4 reviews
June 23, 2025
Incredible. Nobody inspires me to write more than Lidia Yuknavitch. I dog-eared so many pages in this book because there are questions, insights, and humor I'll flip back to again and again. This is now my second favorite memoir behind The Chronology of Water😊💙💦
Profile Image for Kip Gire.
505 reviews20 followers
June 24, 2025
What an amazing and powerful memoir... I felt profoundly touched multiple times through the single sitting I read this in.... this is a beautiful book that I will reread and continually pull from... just brilliant.
Profile Image for Emery Pearson.
21 reviews1 follower
April 21, 2025
I slogged through this, unfortunately, because I adore The Chronology of Water. The writing is beautiful, of course, but I found myself putting the book down and not picking it up for a week or more. Maybe it’s me; maybe I’ll try again someday. But for now I’m just glad to move on.
Profile Image for Alyson.
758 reviews6 followers
May 9, 2025
1st read:
I don't write here to review and I certainly have issues with the oligarch who owns this platform. I rarely read what others post. Yet. I have started a tradition of writing favorite quotes from things I read. I am still trying to migrate this practice to a domain of my own. Yet I also know that this space helps writers. I have been off social media for 90 days now. I don't know how to engage with the world beyond work anymore via the Internet. Books, as ever, save me.

Some thoughts:
I love this book.
I adore this writer.
I pulled her book off the shelf years ago because it's so rare to see a Lithuanian name.
I'm rereading it. I turned the first page after I finished the last.
I started with the eBook from the public library and I decided to buy the book so that the 9 people waiting in line can get it faster.
I hope that money supports her writer program.
I lost all of my highlighted quotes so I am reading it.
I purchased it from an independent bookstore after a painting class. I feel like she would approve.
I've ordered books by Ginny and M Duras I have not read.
She may have pulled me back to writing...a wave that has receded and a tide that has not returned for me. Maybe.

Thank you, dear Lidia.

2nd read:
I started this again as soon as I finished it and I read a chapter a day. I see the waves now are not just water but colors. Each chapter has a color or several connected to the theme. Damn, I love her writing.

"Loving a drinker is like loving a river always leaving you for the ocean."

"You may have to lay some bodies down; you do not need to carry every body forever."
Profile Image for Judy Frabotta.
258 reviews
February 16, 2025
Yuknavitch has a beautiful lyric voice. But somehow I was impatient for the book to end. It was fascinating in parts, grandiose at times, and somehow both incomplete and overwritten. But I'm not sorry I read it. It felt sometimes like there was a woman bleeding in my kitchen.
Profile Image for Sam Cheng.
270 reviews48 followers
February 28, 2025
Conventional and non-conventional memoir fans, Lidia Yuknavitch.

Yuknavitch underscores how Reading the Waves isn’t a traditional memoir; rather, she reads (reveals to readers) and liberates fictitious stories lodged in her body. This literary release is a shape-shifting, narrative transmographic space. To be 100 with you, I’m not entirely sure what “narrative transmography” means for Yukavitch, but she wants to permit one’s mapping of experiences to move without erasing experiences. It sorta functions this way: Yukavitch returns to certain objective stand-out events in her life; in the act of inhabiting the stories in her mind, they shape her such that the memories’ subjective and fluid meanings evolve. The preface lays out Yuknavitch’s philosophy and methodology of writing about remembering. Is it a genre convention to lay out one’s approach to memoir-ing in the preface? Either Chihanya or Mlotek (or both) writes theirs out too in Bibliophobia and No Fault, respectively (I forget). I mention this because I finished their memoirs recently, and I think the throat-clearing is fine but unnecessary.

Whether or not I accurately grasped Yuknavitch’s modus operandi in theory, I really enjoyed Reading the Waves and it worked for me. Laden with groundedness, she shows readers why the experiences included in this compilation meaningfully shape her. Nothing feels disjointed (save for the last chapter, Solaces), which I thought might be the case, given her introductory remarks on the book’s genre. The writing is textured—she’s careful, abrasive, love-lorn, tender. The English language is Kinetic Sand in Yukavitch’s dexterous hands. I love it when authors unpretentiously remind me that verbs can be nominalized and nouns verbalized.

I also love when memoirs help me embody someone else’s narrative, take me deep into their mind’s nexus, show me how to sympathize with the author, and leave me feeling hopeful. Yuknavitch endures in spite of wading through intersections of death, and wonderfully, she normalizes sorrow, guiding readers to shed the bodies too. Moreover, even though loss dismantles, Yuknavitch pushes you to dive towards transformation because what’s ugly can be reshaped and emerge into something better, whether for us or those who come after. Yuknavitch seems to credit her mother, at least in part, who embodied grace in the face of violence and navigated life “with one leg six inches short than the other” (150). One of my favorite chapters is Monster because she honors her mom well.
Profile Image for Kaylie.
739 reviews12 followers
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August 18, 2025
Ran out of books on a trip and picked this up at an indie Denver bookstore I was happy to support, Petals & Pages. I wish I'd chosen anything else! This book was deeply not for me, despite being about many topics I usually connect with. The same thing happened for me years ago when I tried reading Yuknavitch's celebrated novel, The Book of Joan. Although much lauded, Yuknavitch's writing is just not for me. Unrated because obviously this is a much-loved book and writer; in another situation I'd have put it down after 10 pages or so, and we'd have drifted apart, this book and I, mutually blameless. But I had run out of books and this was what was on the plane with me, so we persisted. I did not enjoy it. The problem here clearly lies with me.
27 reviews5 followers
March 8, 2025
She’s done it again—I love Lidia Yuknavitch so much. This book came through my life at the perfect time, and her discussion of the synthesis of fact and fiction really opened something for me. I love her brain.
Profile Image for Fabienne.
53 reviews
June 7, 2025
I’ve been craving a book that really hits — and this was it. I cannot praise Lidia Yuknavitch’s writing enough. You might wonder how it’s possible for someone to write a second memoir without it becoming repetitive, but apparently, it is. She has a unique way of narrating pain in a raw, blunt, and visceral way, while still maintaining a kind of meta-level without it being too abstract.
I particularly loved her descriptions of gender, sexuality and desire.
I cried a little bit at the end of the hiking chapter.
If you want a non conventional memoir that deals with processing trauma and pain this is for you!
Profile Image for Jeremy Hanes.
162 reviews17 followers
March 3, 2025
I am have never read such a beautiful and heartening memoir. Thank you Lidia for shedding your skin and letting us in. Such beautiful wisdom and outlook through heartache and pain.
Profile Image for Estefani Duran.
25 reviews
June 29, 2025
* 4.5 stars rounded up *

Memories come and then you have to let them go. A beautiful, moving read. Yuknavitch reminding me that letting go takes time and ”it’s not your fault”.
201 reviews
July 19, 2025
This was a kind of painful but beautiful read. The writing reminds me of my own writing in a way that I don’t think I’ve ever encountered before- the author is uncertain at times, and reading these essays feels like reading the process of someone, well, processing something, working through a feeling or an association or a complicated set of interconnected feelings. This book feels deep and rich and messy, very human. I loved it.
Profile Image for Justin.
57 reviews
March 15, 2025
Beautiful perspective on what it is to be alive. Will take her experience and messages with me.
Profile Image for Jeanmlane.
30 reviews
May 9, 2025
This is very different than my favorite book by this author - The Chronology of Water. This book is like one long prose poem. Not my cup of tea. I think my opinion was colored by the audio book as it was read by the author.
Profile Image for Amy Prosenjak.
272 reviews
June 15, 2025
Slightly repetitive to her original memoir, The Chronology of Water which is coming out as a film directed by Kristen Stewart. “Memory slingshots you back and sideways. It interrupts time whether you like it or not, usually through your body. A sound, a smell, an image, and your body becomes a quivering wobble.”
Profile Image for Andrea.
1,258 reviews96 followers
March 9, 2025
A very intimate and inspiring book.
Profile Image for Julia Jenne.
84 reviews5 followers
March 9, 2025
Reading this book was like being carried along in a current. Wow
Profile Image for Shannon Hovey.
Author 1 book27 followers
June 13, 2025
While Lidia Yuknavitch's first memoir, The Chronology of Water, had a profound effect on me, this 2nd memoir is quite different. Neither reads like any other memoir I've read, both unique in their essence, but also from each other. Chronology took me a couple of false starts before I got inside the voice. After that, it became one of my favourite books of all time. It still is. I have read it several times now. Reading the Waves though, feels somewhat disjointed, and though I realize this is part of what makes Lidia's writing so unique, her way of moving back and forth through memories, I was not captivated this time around. Maybe the difference is more in the method of reading than in the books themselves, for I listened to Waves on Audible, with Lidia reading her own words. She has a slow, depressive voice, and yes, the material is depressing, but I wonder if I'd have gotten more out of it had I read the words on the page as I did with Chronology, instead of having them read to me, even if by the author herself. All that said, Yucknavitch is still one of my favourite writers. Her novel Dora is one of the most brilliant things I've ever read and I'm sure I will come back to this one at some point, though next time will read rather than listen.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 107 reviews

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