A Way Home: A Memoir of Losing Yourself, and the Beauty of Returning

A Way Home: A Memoir of Losing Yourself, and the Beauty of Returning

$34.79

Review Quotes: "In this stunning memoir, Barnes emphasizes kapwa--the Tagalog word for shared humanity--writing with a clarity that refuses spectacle and showing how home is grown slowly, through attention and care, rather than claimed all...

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Review Quotes:

"In this stunning memoir, Barnes emphasizes kapwa--the Tagalog word for shared humanity--writing with a clarity that refuses spectacle and showing how home is grown slowly, through attention and care, rather than claimed all at once. A Way Home is a needed reminder that even after displacement and injury, the world still offers places--often in each other--where we can rest and belong." --Aimee Nezhukumatathil, New York Times bestselling author of World of Wonders and Bite by Bite

"A book to treasure and befriend for its beautiful and altering journeys outward into the world and inward into the brain and the composition of the self, A Way Home is a miraculous achievement." --Megha Majumdar, author of National Book Award finalist A Guardian and a Thief

"With A Way Home, Cinelle Barnes takes us with her as she recovers from a sudden, ruptured brain aneurysm. Her journey is far more than physical. It is the healing of soul, of body, of identity. It is a woman/mother/daughter/immigrant/writer redrawing the map of herself. The mere existence of this book is a triumph. The beautiful magic of it is a feat of awe. While reclaiming her mind, Cinelle has given us her heart and everything for which it beats." --Annabelle Tometich, author of The Mango Tree, winner of the 2025 Southern Book Prize for Nonfiction

"At a time when American society desperately needs empathy for immigrants, A Way Home has offered us a gift. Weaving together travel writing about her search for home and vignettes about the aftermath of a ruptured brain aneurysm, Barnes peels back the layers of injury for the formerly undocumented Filipina protagonist of her story to reveal the true meaning of recovery. This richly textured, lyrical memoir honors the deepest parts of our humanity and helps us 'face the world ready for our most loving work.'" --Grace M. Cho, author of Tastes Like War, finalist for the National Book Award, winner of the Asian Pacific American Literature Award, Time's Top 100 Books of the Year

"This book, like the author herself, is an astonishment. Each line Barnes writes insists on connection, reminds us that stories bridge us to each other, our world, and the mystery of being alive. There is so much we don't choose, in Barnes's case, a sudden medical crisis, a brain aneurysm, which utterly transforms her life. But once she's able, Barnes chooses to write and share these beautiful, powerful moments of illness, pain, uncertainty, and ultimately, love, through stories. I came away from reading this memoir buoyed by Barnes's voice and the companionship and solace she offers in these pages. A must read." --Grace Talusan, author of The Body Papers, Assistant Teaching Professor of English, Brown University



Review Citations:

  • Booklist 05/01/2026 (EAN 9781662510618, Hardcover) - *Starred Review

Contributor Bio:Barnes, Cinelle

Cinelle Barnes is the author of Monsoon Mansion: A Memoir and Malaya: Essays on Freedom. She is also the editor of A Measure of Belonging: Twenty-One Writers of Color on the New American South. Cinelle is a brain aneurysm survivor and sits on the South Carolina Brain Injury Leadership Council. She lives in Charleston with her husband, daughter, and cat. For information, visit www.cinellebarnes.com.