
This Way Back
“Winning and contemplative.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
Going back to her ancestral homeland, a Greek American girl discovers she is a lesbian in love with God, so her questions about home and belonging will not be easily answered.
This Way Back dramatizes a childhood split between Queens, New York, and Cyprus, an island nation with a long colonial history and a culture to which Joanna Eleftheriou could never quite adjust. The book avows a Greek-Cypriot-American lesbian’s existence by documenting its scenes: reenacting an 1829 mass suicide by jumping off a school stage onto gym mats at St. Nicholas, harvesting carobs on ancestral land, purchasing UNESCO-protected lace, marching in the island’s first gay pride parade, visiting Cyprus’s occupied north against a dying father’s wish, and pruning geraniums, cypress trees, and jasmine after her father grew too weak to lift the shears. While the author’s life binds the essays in This Way Back into what reads like a memoir, the book questions memoir’s conventional boundaries between the individual and her community, and between political and personal loss, the human and the environment, and the living and the dead.
Of Acacia and Maple
Your Schedule Depends on the Sky
The Actress Who Isn’t Acting
She and I
Ithacas
The Temple of Zeus
The Other Side
Wild Honey, Locust Beans
Unsent Letter to My Father
Shopping for Story
Dancing Greek
Out
Cyprus Pride
Inheritance Law
Without Goodbyes
Epilogue: Moonlight Elegy
Acknowledgments
Notes
Sonya Huber, author of Pain Woman Takes Your Keys and Other Essays from a Nervous System
“Intimate and a touch mournful, most powerfully so when the author writes about her sexuality. . . . These essays reveal an impassioned and hard-fought sense of self and place.”
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“The essays entice every sense. . . . Heartfelt and heartrending.”
Foreword Reviews





