"Here is a voice, both smoldering and meditative, that inhabits every page like an attentive host, inviting us in and offering no choice but to step over the threshold. The pages turn, it seems, of their own volition."
—Sue Halpern
    Kim Dana Kupperman
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"A remarkably talented writer, Kim Dana Kupperman understands the essay first and foremost as a literary form. Yet she never ventures into craft or creativity for its own sake. I Just Lately Started Buying Wings is a high-voltage book grounded in the passionate and often messy business of living. And best of all with these essays, something vital is always at issue."
—Robert Atwan, Series Editor,
The Best American Essays


“'Go fish, Kimche, go fish,'" says her grandmother Fanya. And fish Kim Dana Kupperman does, down into the deep uncertain pool of suicide, death by AIDS, religious identity, bodies altered by the radiation poured forth at Chernobyl. These linked stories add up to a life—her life—in ways that are both harrowing and affirming, and that command our readerly respect.
—Albert Goldbarth

“Kim Dana Kupperman is many things in this collection of essays—a daughter of tumultuous parents, granddaughter in search of her Ukrainian grandmother, sister of variously troubled half-brothers, a woman trying to sort through the vagaries of her own heart. We note the many things she is and has been, but what is even more exciting in this brilliant debut is that we feel in the presence of a writer. With sensuous, precise, and superbly crafted language, Kupperman gives us what literature at its best does: compelling stories artfully told."
Barbara Hurd


"In prose that is by turns lyrical and precise, Kim Dana Kupperman examines the mystery and depth of the human heart. Generous, forceful, and compassionate, I Just Lately Started Buying Wings is a stunning debut by an essayist of the first rank."
Michael Steinberg, Founding Editor, Fourth Genre: Explorations in Nonfiction


"Moving selections, gracefully composed"
Kirkus Reviews

Published by Graywolf Press. Winner of the 2009 Katharine Bakeless Nason Prize in Nonfiction, selected by Sue Halpern and awarded through Middlebury College’s Bread Loaf Writers' Conference.