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Writing professor signs contract for third book

Dr. Nancy McCabe, associate professor of writing, has signed a contract to publish her new book, tentatively titled “Over our Heads and Across the Sea: A Journey to my Daughter’s Birthplace in China,” next fall with the University of Missouri Press.

The book is a follow-up to McCabe’s 2003 book, “Meeting Sophie: A Memoir of Adoption,” about the adoption of her daughter from China.

The new book began with a “homeland visit” by the McCabes in the fall of 2008, in which they visited the region of China from which Sophie was adopted.

McCabe said she used the trip as a framework for exploring other issues of parenting, interracial and intercultural families and international adoption, including addressing a child’s feeling of connection to multiple heritages.

Heritage trips, particularly to China, have become a rite of passage for many children adopted from outside the United States, McCabe said, but there is little in the way of existing literature on the trips.

The McCabes traveled with a company that organizes heritage trips. While much of the trip involved standard tourism with visits to a school and historical and cultural sites, the tour company also arranged for Sophie to participate in activities that a child in China would – such as flying a kite in Tiananmen Square.

But such trips, McCabe said, are not vacations.

“They can be infused with a lot of tension,” she said, explaining that children feel connection to the home country and may briefly reject their parents to see what it’s like to finally blend in. Parents can’t help wondering how their children would be different if they’d been raised in their home country.

But the conflicts were replaced with awe for both mother and daughter when the pair returned to the small village from which Sophie was adopted and met a man who had cared for her as an infant.

Two excerpts from the new book have been included in the Best American Essays Notable List.

In addition to “Meeting Sophie,” McCabe’s previous work includes “After the Flashlight Man: A Memoir of Awakening.” She is the director of the writing program at Pitt-Bradford and teaches in the brief-residency master of fine arts program in creative writing at Spalding University.

Her work has appeared in literary journals and mainstream media, and she has won several awards, including a Pushcart Prize for memoir.

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