Contents May Have Shifted

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by Pam Houston


  10. What are the various ways in which Pam experiences family? How about you?

  11. Contents was originally conceived as “144 reasons not to commit suicide.” What would your own version of “144 reasons not to commit suicide” look like?

  M O R E N O R T O N B O O K S W I T H

  R E A D I N G G R O U P G U I D E S A V A I L A B L E

  Diana Abu-Jaber

  Birds of Paradise

  Crescent

  Origin

  Diane Ackerman

  The Zookeeper’s Wife

  Rabih Alameddine

  I, the Divine

  Rupa Bajwa

  The Sari Shop

  Andrea Barrett

  The Air We Breathe

  The Voyage of the Narwhal

  Peter C. Brown

  The Fugitive Wife

  Lan Samantha Chang

  Hunger

  Inheritance

  Anne Cherian

  A Good Indian Wife

  Marilyn Chin

  Revenge of the Mooncake Vixen

  Leah Hager Cohen

  House Lights

  Michael Cox

  The Glass of Time

  The Meaning of Night

  Jared Diamond

  Guns, Germs, and Steel

  Andre Dubus III

  The Garden of Last Days

  John Dufresne

  Louisiana Power & Light

  Requiem, Mass.

  Anne Enright

  The Forgotten Waltz

  Jennifer Cody Epstein

  The Painter from Shanghai

  Ellen Feldman

  Lucy

  Scottsboro

  Susan Fletcher

  Eve Green

  Oystercatchers

  Paula Fox

  The Widow’s Children

  Betty Friedan

  The Feminine Mystique

  Denise Giardina

  Emily’s Ghost

  Barbara Goldsmith

  Obsessive Genius

  Stephen Greenblatt

  Will in the World

  Helon Habila

  Waiting for an Angel

  Patricia Highsmith

  Strangers on a Train

  Ann Hood

  The Knitting Circle

  Dara Horn

  All Other Nights

  The World to Come

  Janette Turner Hospital

  Due Preparations for the Plague

  Pam Houston

  Sight Hound

  Helen Humphreys

  Coventry

  The Lost Garden

  Wayne Johnston

  The Custodian of Paradise

  Erica Jong

  Sappho’s Leap

  N. M. Kelby

  White Truffles in Winter

  Peg Kingman

  Not Yet Drown’d

  Nicole Krauss

  The History of Love*

  Don Lee

  Country of Origin

  Ellen Litman

  The Last Chicken in America

  Vyvyane Loh

  Breaking the Tongue

  Benjamin Markovits

  A Quiet Adjustment

  Joe Meno

  The Great Perhaps

  Maaza Mengiste

  Beneath the Lion’s Gaze

  Emily Mitchell

  The Last Summer of the World

  Honor Moore

  The Bishop’s Daughter

  The White Blackbird

  Liz Moore

  Heft

  Donna Morrissey

  Sylvanus Now*

  Daniyal Mueenuddin

  In Other Rooms, Other Wonders

  Patrick O’Brian

  The Yellow Admiral*

  Samantha Peale

  The American Painter Emma Dial

  Heidi Pitlor

  The Birthdays

  Jean Rhys

  Wide Sargasso Sea

  Mary Roach

  Bonk

  Spook*

  Stiff

  Gay Salisbury and

  Laney Salisbury

  The Cruelest Miles

  Susan Fromberg Schaeffer

  The Snow Fox

  Laura Schenone

  The Lost Ravioli Recipes of Hoboken

  Jessica Shattuck

  The Hazards of Good Breeding

  Perfect Life

  Frances Sherwood

  The Book of Splendor

  Joan Silber

  Ideas of Heaven

  The Size of the World

  Johanna Skibsrud

  The Sentimentalists

  Dorothy Allred Solomon

  Daughter of the Saints

  Mark Strand and

  Eavan Boland

  The Making of a Poem*

  Ellen Sussman (editor)

  Bad Girls

  Mary Helen Stefaniak

  The Cailiffs of Baghdad, Georgia

  Sara Stockbridge

  The Fortunes of Grace Hammer

  Brady Udall

  The Lonely Polygamist

  Barry Unsworth

  Land of Marvels

  Sacred Hunger

  Brad Watson

  The Heaven of Mercury*

  Jenny White

  The Abyssinian Proof

  Belle Yang

  Forget Sorrow

  Alexi Zentner

  Touch

  *Available only on the Norton Web site

  More praise for

  Contents May Have Shifted

  “With her trademark intelligence and unwavering nerve, Pam Houston has once again beautifully ruined me with her words. In Contents May Have Shifted, she takes us around the world and deep into a human heart with such fearless precision we come to feel both the world and that heart as our own. Houston is funny and wise. She’s intimate and raw.”

  —Cheryl Strayed, author of Wild

  “Highly recommended for adventurous readers.”

  —Library Journal

  “A lyrical meditation on the limits of vision and experience, the routes we travel in order to reach an understanding of our place in the world, and how we cobble together a sense of selfhood from disparate parts. . . . Fundamentally affirmative, Houston’s work places us on a peak between earth and sky, showing us how normal it is to both fall in love with, and feel nervous about, the eternally shifting nature of the self, and of the world.”

  —St. Louis Magazine

  “Rewards: a gradual unfolding of the knots of pain beneath Pam’s troubled back and emotional life; the artful ways in which the sections reflect each other; the steady revelation of multiple layers of wonder; the fragile connection that grows between Pam and Rick’s young daughter. And the near magical sense of completion in the final pages—the feeling you get each time a kaleidoscope clicks momentarily into place, revealing yet another beautiful form.”

  —Jane Ciabattari, Boston Globe

  “Houston can be wickedly funny and she is an astute observer of human behavior. . . . Armchair travelers will rejoice in her lively descriptions of venues as diverse as Drigung, Tibet and Denver, Colorado.”

  —Elayne Clift, New York Journal of Books

  “The more time you spend with Contents, the more you see its genius as both separate pieces and a whole.”

  —Rebecca Barry, San Francisco Chronicle

  “Sometimes fearless, sometimes scared to death, the narrator . . . doesn’t take herself too seriously during these quests, which often include near-death experiences, and she skillfully captures the essence of each place she visits.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  “True to its title, each snippet harbors small dips and rises that add up to cumulative wisdom by book’s end, and a satisfying arc of anecdote that makes a convincing whole.”

  —Ben Fulton, Salt Lake Tribune

  “A tale so vivid, intricate, and intimate that it puts high-def TV to shame: One moment, we’re straddling lava flowing from a Hawaiian volcano; the next, we’re watching thousands of glowworms light up a New Zeal
and cave. . . . Peppered throughout is advice to live by, stuff worth scribbling down and posting on your inspiration board for when that dark cloud rolls in.”

  —Elle

  “Eat, Pray, Love meets Up in the Air in this engaging novel about a woman whose craving for adventure (and jerk of a boyfriend) sends her flying.”

  —O, The Oprah Magazine

  “A collection of delicately framed and delightful vignettes. . . . Readers will feel like they too are touring the world.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “[Pam] philosophizes with girlfriends, mystics, and old lovers on all life’s usual questions in a refreshingly witty and bold manner. . . . In controlled, elegant prose, [Houston] imbues each pithy chapter with unifying lyricism. . . . Unapologetic and empowering, Houston’s book hammers home the idea that if you don’t have problems, you probably aren’t living.”

  —Katharine Frank, Booklist, starred review

  “Whether it’s truth or fiction, [Houston’s] candor is a real treat; she can throw in down and dirty sex talk as easily as ‘pass the salt.’ . . . The redoubtable Pam Houston takes us on an enjoyable ride—around the world—the one we all live in as well as her own unusual interior states.”

  —Shelf Awareness

  “My love for Pam Houston runs deep. Really deep. . . . I’ve yet to read something of hers without walking away in awe of her talent and the depth of her understanding. . . . And the language! Oh, how Houston knows her way around a sentence. . . . Contents May Have Shifted is unconventional in format, but the issues and questions and longings at its heart are universal. Houston plays with narrative enough to keep things interesting but not so much that the book becomes more about form than function, making it work as well for readers who come in search of story as for those who come looking for art. It is awesome, period, and sure to be on my ‘best of 2012’ list.”

  —Rebecca Joines Schinsky, The Book Lady’s Blog

  “A driving kinetic energy . . . keeps the reader whirling as Pam turns an observant and critical eye on herself, her relationship, and her country. . . . Houston is as adept a writer as she is an adventurer. And it’s her writing with its startling images of the natural world that set this book apart from the rest.”

  —Erika Recordon, Oregonian

  “Houston’s writing is poetic and descriptive, bringing readers along for a ride. . . . Readers will root for Houston and hope that the destination will be worthy of her journey. . . . Entertaining.”

  —Leslie Doran, Durango Herald

  “[Houston’s] witty thoughts on people and life really entertain. After the first chapter, readers will recognize what a treat it is to travel for free.”

  —Melanie Smith, Bookreporter

  “Pam Houston was an early master of the art of rendering fiercely independent, brilliant women in love with the wrong men. . . . That characterization holds true for Pam, the narrator of Houston’s latest novel, Contents May Have Shifted. . . . Quietly funny, poetic, and authentic—a thoroughly rewarding trip.”

  —Sarah Norris, Barnes & Noble Review

  “Brazenly challenges the lines between fiction and non-fiction.”

  —Wallace Baine, Santa Cruz Sentinel

  “Contents has the voice of a more reflective and analytical Houston, one who has lived and written like a motherfucker . . . but who now wants to love a lot and maybe not leave quite so much.”

  —Emma Eisenberg, Full Stop

  “In her new novel . . . [Houston] showcases her wiser, more mature voice as she drops the reader into locales as far-flung as Alaska, Bhutan, California and Durango, Colo.”

  —Libby Cowels, Columbus Dispatch

  “Read[s] like the best-written diary you could ever happen upon.”

  —Caramie Schnell, Vail Daily

  “More than a compilation of short stories about travel, Pam Houston’s Contents May Have Shifted is a clear and thoughtful expression of the human relationship with the world. . . . Strong minded, lovely and thoughtful.”

  —Livi Whitaker, Deseret News

  “Mesmerizing. . . . Houston once again proves noteworthy. . . . Contents May Have Shifted is just as honest as her popular Cowboys Are My Weakness, with even more experience and clarity behind it.”

  —Wolf Schneider, ABQ Arts and Entertainment

  “Houston . . . is a master at taking the facts of events, people and places she’s encountered, and creating characters that resonate with the truth about all of our lives.”

  —Jennifer Haupt, Psychology Today

  “Pam Houston writes . . . like a modern-day Jane Austen. . . . Excels at dropping the reader right into the scene with precise and visceral details.”

  —Erica Olsen, High Country News

  “In a book packed with world travelers in search of the sublime, Houston . . . echoes Vonnegut by illustrating how we’re on this planet to eat, drink and try to discover a way to be merry.”

  —Spectrum Culture

  Copyright © 2012 by Pam Houston

  All rights reserved

  First published as a Norton paperback 2013

  Lyrics from “War,” Words and Music by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong © 1970 (Renewed 1998) Jobete Music Co., Inc., All Rights Controlled and Administered by EMI Blackwood Music Inc. on behalf of Stone Agate Music (a Division of Jobete Music Co., Inc.). All Rights Reserved, International Copyright Secured, Used by Permission. Reprinted by permission of Hal Leonard Corporation.

  Lyrics from “Theologians,” Words by Jeff Tweedy, Music by Jeff Tweedy, Chris Girard and Mikael Jorgensen © 2004 Words Ampersand Music (BMI), Chaotic-goodmusic (ASCAP), Poeyfarre Songs (BMI), Pear Blossom Music (BMI) and Jorgenstormusic (ASCAP)/Administered by Bug Music. All Rights Reserved. Used by Permission. Reprinted by permission of Hal Leonard Corporation.

  Excerpt from “Armed, Luminous” from Riding Westward by Carl Phillips. Copyright © 2006 by Carl Phillips. Reprinted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC.

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book,

  write to Permissions, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.,

  500 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10110

  For information about special discounts for bulk purchases, please contact W. W. Norton Special Sales at [email protected] or 800-233-4830

  Book design by Chris Welch

  Production manager: Anna Oler

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Houston, Pam.

  Contents may have shifted : a novel / Pam Houston. — 1st ed.

  p. cm.

  ISBN 978-0-393-08265-4

  1. Life change events—Fiction. 2. Travel—Fiction.

  3. Self-acceptance—Fiction. 4. Domestic fiction. I. Title.

  PS3558.O8725C66 2012

  813’.54—dc23

  2011042403

  ISBN 978-0-393-34348-9 pbk.

  ISBN 978-0-393-08292-0 ebook

  W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.

  500 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10110

  www.wwnorton.com

  W. W. Norton & Company Ltd.

  Castle House, 75/76 Wells Street, London W1T 3QT

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