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I Sing to Use the Waiting

A Collection of Essays About the Women Singers Who've Made Me Who I Am

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

I Sing to Use the Waiting: A Collection of Essays about the Women Singers Who've Made Me Who I Am is a vital and affecting reflection on how popular culture can shape personal identity.

With remarkable grace, candor, and a poet's ear for prose, Zachary Pace recounts the women singers—from Cat Power to Madonna, Kim Gordon to Rihanna—who shaped them as a young person coming-of-age in rural New York, first discovering their own queer voice.
Structured like a mixtape, Pace juxtaposes their coming out with the music that informed them along the way. They recount how listening to themselves sing along as a child to a Disney theme song they recorded on a boom box in 1995, was when they first realized there was an effeminate inflection to their voice. As childhood friendships splinter, Pace discusses the relationship between Whitney Houston and Robyn Crawford. Cat Power's song "My Daddy Was a Musician" spurs a discussion of Pace's own musician father, and their gradual estrangement.
Resonant and compelling, I Sing to Use the Waiting is a deeply personal rumination on how queer stories are abundant yet often suppressed, and how music may act as a comforting balm carrying us through difficult periods and decisions.

Read an excerpt:
Debutiful
presents: "Colors of the Wind," an excerpt from Zachary Pace's I Sing to Use the Waiting.

Further reading:
LitHub presents: "Zachary Pace on the Push and Pull of Working in Publishing as a Writer" (Jan. 23, 2024)

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 6, 2023
      Pace’s energetic if unwieldy debut explores their lifelong kinship with female musicians. Guiding readers through the music of Nina Simone, Madonna, Whitney Houston, Cat Power, and Rihanna, among others, Pace attempts to explain the sanctuary music has given them as they’ve grappled with OCD and lifelong questions about their gender and sexuality. The 14 dizzying essays swirl together music criticism, personal memories, Talmudic discussions about Kabbalah (via Madonna), theories of Lacan and Freud, references to Frank O’Hara’s poetry, and celebrity gossip. “While a song plays on a loop in my mind,” Pace writes, “I’m free from the infinity of anxious and obsessive-self hating and self-punishing thoughts that would otherwise spiral there.” Occasionally, Pace’s beautiful prose and palpable passion make this soar, as in “The Ballad of Robyn and Whitney,” which analyzes the alleged lesbian relationship between Houston and her assistant. Too often, however, Pace gets lost in the weeds, failing to tame the project’s scope enough for readers to get their minds around it. The result is a glorious muddle.

    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2023

      With a title referencing the first line and title of an Emily Dickinson poem, this debut book is a memoiristic essay collection about the women and nonbinary musicians who have influenced Pace's life. An essay that describes performances by Chan "Cat Power" Marshall is one of the longest in the book, and Marshall is frequently mentioned throughout other essays. Pace relies on Freudian theories as a lens to view their own experiences as a queer person. They also employ an insightful, somewhat highbrow style of writing for subjects that are not always analyzed thoughtfully in the mainstream, such as Disney's Pocahontas and Rihanna. The book has an afterword made up of several essays that are only a few paragraphs each. An extensive section of notes, citing all of Pace's source material, ends the book. VERDICT Readers who enjoyed Jessica Hopper's The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic and Hanif Abdurraqib's They Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Us are the perfect audience for this book.--Heather Sheahan

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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