"I loved this novel and its twisty, complicated, deeply loving and deeply alive characters. Come to be seduced by--and infuriated and moved and worried for--the Battle sisters and stay to re-consider all the various pressures, complexities, and powers that inhabiting a female body so often necessitates." --Lynn Steger Strong, author of Want
"Wurzbacher's novel is so tremendously pleasurable for its stylistic elegance and its utterly charming characters that you might fail to notice its clever interrogation of our current cultural divide. This book is sane, humane, full of heart, and very, very smart." --Antonya Nelson, author of Bound and Funny Once
"Simultaneously funny and poignant, fierce and thoughtful, How to Care for a Human Girl asks questions about our political and social moment, but there are no positions here, just people, deeply human and full of loves both steadfast and uncertain." --Caitlin Horrocks, author of The Vexations
"Ashley Wurzbacher's How to Care for a Human Girl is a heartfelt, compelling story told in an artful blend of sophistication and beauty. This is a fierce look at family, resilience, and love. Wurzbacher is a powerful new voice in fiction."--Brandon Hobson, National Book Award finalist and author of The Removed
"Ambitious, evocative, and deeply empathetic, How to Care for a Human Girl eloquently examines the many facets of personal choice. In assured, calibrated prose, Wurzbacher plumbs the deep love and complicated history that binds two captivating, troubled sisters. This intricately layered novel is prescient, smart, and heartfelt--a compelling look at family, loss, and forgiveness." --Kimberly King Parsons, author of Black Light
"Ashley Wurzbacher writes so well about the battle between the head, the heart, and the body--the rare, beautiful moments when they're all in harmony and the brutal moments they're not. How to Care for a Human Girl is a trenchant and bounteous story of two sisters fighting for autonomy and how even in the grips of indecision women must get to decide their own lives." --Michelle Hart, author of We Do What We Do in the Dark
"Ashley Wurzbacher has written the kind of page turner you want to reread as soon as you're done, a book that belongs, tragically and comically, to our moment--and to every moment that led us here. I laughed and cried and saw myself--saw every woman I've ever known--in the story of the Battle sisters." --Anna Solomon, author of The Book of V
"I was smitten by this story of two sisters teetering on the edge of the rest of their lives, trying to let go and hold on to each other--and themselves--all at once. A tender portrait of the threads of grief and familial devotion, How To Care for A Human Girl asks the essential question of womanhood: what does it mean to live your own life?" --Danielle Lazarin, author of Back Talk
"I was deftly entertained and deeply moved by the Battle sisters' journeys through love, lust, and loss. With tender writing, fully alive characters, and a story about womanhood, sisterhood, and salvation, this novel is a rare thrill, both charming and electrifying. I inhaled it." --Aja Gabel, author of The Ensemble "Ashley Wurzbacher is a prodigiously talented prose stylist with a supernatural ability to capture women in all of their complexity. With her debut novel, she delivers the beautiful, moving, and frequently hilarious story of Maddy and Jada, two sisters whose divergent paths lead them to a fraught, new togetherness. Wurzbacher's unflinching treatment of difficult topics--grief, class, pregnancy, ambition--is handled so brilliantly that you might not realize you're rethinking everything you thought you knew about freedom. A courageous and triumphant debut!"--Kristen Iskandrian, author of Motherest "A nuanced, brilliant, and balanced examination of choice and consequences and all the mysteries of the heart, How To Care for a Human Girl is psychological realism at its finest and most self-aware: a novel that is at once richly insightful and utterly engrossing. And surprisingly funny, as well as heartbreakingly honest. Through love, death, marriage, betrayal, pregnancy, abortion, politics, and more, Maddy and Jada are two of the most sympathetic and fully drawn characters I've read in decades. I miss them already!" -- Gregory Spatz, author Inukshuk and What Could Be Saved "In a lovely and tender way, Wurzbacher presents a heartwarming novel about grief, sisterhood, and the scary but liberating power of choice."--Booklist "This is the heart of the novel: the story of sisters who figure out how to support each other, how to know each other, and how to love each other regardless of the choices either might make."--Chicago Review of Books