Staff Pick
Written in beautiful, poetic fragments, Plums for Months abounds with the challenges Zaji Cox faced growing up, but, more importantly, is suffused with the joy that can’t help but overflow from this unique, imaginative, thoughtful human. Recommended By Gigi L., Powells.com
Synopses & Reviews
As a neurodivergent child in a hundred-year-old house, Zaji Cox collects grammar books, second-hand toys, and sightings of feral cats. She dances and cartwheels through self-discovery and doubt, guided by her big sister and their devoted single mother. Through short essays that evoke the abundant imagination of childhood, Plums for Months explores the challenges of growing up mixed race and low-income on the outskirts of Portland, Oregon.
Review
"Plums For Months is one of the most beautiful books I have ever read, or held, and one which defies every category. It leaves me not knowing what to call it so I'll just call it MAGIC."
Jennifer Pastiloff, bestselling author of On Being Human
Review
"Zaji Cox has given the world the profound gift of re-imagining. By rendering reality in fragments, glimpses, lyric reveries and narrative pulses, she has opened up her own experience — with tremendous generosity and compassion — to illuminate how difference is a place of endlessly generative passion. This book is a poetic lovesong as big as the cosmos. This book brings me back to life."
Lidia Yuknavitch, author of Thrust
Review
"I fell in love. With every page, more and more. Zaji Cox 's beautiful memoir, Plums for Months, is an intimate portrait of a girl so smart and so wise and so open about her fears and insecurities that I wanted to wrap my arms around the very pages I was reading. Yes, Cox is acutely aware of the ways she is different. But her earnest struggle and all her obvious strengths are the picture of a hero. This is a story of precise particularity that is also somehow universal. It is a beautiful work of pain and wonder. If you have a beating heart, you can relate."
Liz Scott, author of This Never Happened
Review
"While every neurodiverse person is unique, it is in the relatable observations and unique worldview that Zaji Cox's vignettes shine. An amalgamate anthem, Plums for Months shows how to seek solitude, coping, and comfort in everyday interactions."
Joe Biel, author of Good Trouble: Building a Successful Life & Business with Autism
About the Author
Zaji Cox wrote her first short story at age nine. A dancer, model, and artist, she has performed at the PDX Poetry Festival, Survival of the Feminist reading series, Corporeal Writing's LOOP, and the Northwest Folklife Festival. She holds a bachelor's degree in English and her writing can be found in Pathos Literary Magazine, Entropy, The Portland Metrozine, Cultural Daily, CARE Covid Art REsource, and the anthology 2020: The Year of the Asterisk (University of Hell Press).