cover image Only Child: Writers on the Singular Joys and Solitary Sorrows of Growing Up Solo

Only Child: Writers on the Singular Joys and Solitary Sorrows of Growing Up Solo

. Harmony, $23 (256pp) ISBN 978-0-307-23806-1

Kathryn Harris (The Kiss), John Hodgman (The Areas of My Expertise) and the New Yorker's Janice Thurman (Isak Dinesen) are just three of the noteworthy writers who contributed to this collection of essays on growing up sans siblings. Editors Siegel and Uviller have gathered the 20 original pieces into general themes: childhood, family relationships, the desire-or lack thereof-for a sibling and the unique joys and perils of being an adult ""only."" The gems of this volume are the authors who trade analysis for storytelling, such as magician and author Teller's life-affirming ""New Year's Eve 1997,"" Peter Terzian's ""Postcards to Myself,"" Rebecca Walker's ""Blood of my Blood"" and Alysia Abbott's ""A Pair of Onlies."" Though other entries are weighed down by too much therapy-speak, some provide resonant psychological insight, as in Sara Reistad-Long's: ""Having Mom and Dad waiting in the wings had made me appear enviably confident, but I suspect that when my supporting cast takes its final bow, I'll stumble more than most."" Though the book's topic proves too narrow to sustain its nearly 300 pages-as Thomas Beller notes, it's ""hard to know how to separate the only from the childhood""-many only children, as well as those who sometimes wish they were, will find much to appreciate in this volume.