Unsayable Michael Cunningham memoir A Life in Writing

Michael Cunningham – Unsayable

Michael Cunningham Unsayable review and information memoir of a life in writing by the American author. HarperCollins will publish the memoir by Michael Cunningham on July 21, 2026. Here you can read information about the content of the book, the author and the publication. The Dutch translation of the memoir titled Het onzichtbare, will be published October 30, 2026.

Michael Cunningham Unsayable reviews and information

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  • “A luminous meditation on writing and on life, and how the two entwine, Unsayable is a memoir like no other, from one of the great writers of our time.” (Tash Aw)
  • “What a shimmering memory lane we readers get to walk down in this book, led by one of the most enchanting stylists of our time. Any moment we stretch a mind’s hand out, our fingertips meet the weightless touch of a hummingbird. Is that hummingbird Michael Cunningham’s memory or our own? It doesn’t matter. The joy is for everyone who reads with memory and imagination.” (Yiyun Li)
  • “From one of our great living masters comes a book about making sense of a life through writing. In true Cunningham fashion, it is also a book about time; how time’s passage shapes our understanding of ourselves, our desires and our capacity to articulate our experiences. I read this book in a single, astonished sitting. There are insights, and anecdotes, contained in Unsayable that I will treasure and return to for the rest of my life.” (Jordan Tanahill)
  • “Such a generous book, essential for anyone wanting to relearn the arts of curiosity and devotion.” (Miranda July)

Michael Cunningham Unsayable

Unsayable

A Life in Writing

  • Author: Michael Cunnigham (United States)
  • Book type: memoir
  • Publisher: HarperCollins
  • To be released: July 21, 2026
  • Length: 304 pages
  • Sizes: 14,1 x 22,2 x 30 cm
  • Weight: 420 gram
  • Format: hardback / ebook
  • Prize: £ 16.99
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Blurb of the Michael Cunningham memoir

An intimate memoir portraying a life spent trying to describe the indescribable—from the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist of The Hours and Day.

Go ahead. Try using language to slit the skin of mortality to see what’s on the other side.

At the age of three, Michael Cunningham began obsessively collecting the names of things: oak, Chevrolet, finch, tulip, Tupperware… Each word rendered the world ever so slightly more understandable, more describable, kicking off a lifelong love affair with language—one that would, eventually, maybe inevitably, lead him to become a writer.

In Unsayable, Cunningham’s memories spill forth, and with them, reflections on the craft of writing. He is fifteen, in a swimming pool at night, gazing at the first boy he ever fell in love with, who is lost in contemplative silence. He is a new college graduate, setting off for nowhere in a Dodge Dart, hoping to pull meaning (and a novel) from the expanse of America. He is on Cape Cod, regaling an elderly couple with invented tales of sexual escapades. He is in an art gallery, unwittingly having the first in a lifetime of conversations with the man he would marry. A thread ties each beautifully-wrought moment to the next: what is unspoken, what won’t yield to language, what is embellished beyond recognition, what is still left to say.

Luminous, perceptive and powerful, Unsayable is an ode to literature, a meditation on craft and an intimate account of a life spent trying to put into words that which resists depiction. This, it turns out, is the lifeblood of the fiction writer: the impossibility of capturing the human experience, and the relentless desire to try.

Michael Cunningham is born November 6, 1952 in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. He is the author of the novels A Home at the End of the WorldFlesh and BloodSpecimen DaysBy Nightfall, and The Snow Queen, as well as the collection A Wild Swan and Other Tales, and the nonfiction book Land’s End: A Walk in Provincetown. He is the recipient of a Whiting Award and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and his work has appeared in The New Yorker and The Best American Short StoriesThe Hours was a New York Times bestseller, and the winner of both the PEN/Faulkner Award and the Pulitzer Prize. Raised in Los Angeles, Michael Cunningham lives in New York City.

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