Elena Passarello’s essays on performance, pop culture, and the natural world have been translated into six languages. Her recent work appears in the New York Times Book Review, Paris Review, Audubon and Best American Science and Nature Writing. In 2019, Outside named her one of the “25 Essential Women Authors Writing about the Wild.” She is the author of two collections, the most recent of which, Animals Strike Curious Poses, was a New York Times Editor’s Choice. It made the Best Books of 2017 lists from several publications including the Guardian and Publisher’s Weekly. Her next book, about the spotty legacy of Elvis Presley, is forthcoming from Penguin Press in 2025. You can hear her every week on the PRX radio variety show Live Wire!
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Let Me Clear My ThroatEssaysFrom"Hey, Big Spender!"
By the time he was infamous enough to sell out bullfighting arenas, the Caruso C was a sort of burlesque number. He would inch to it from the frequencies below, nearly embrace the note, and then flat a bit before trumpeting, C! with full tenor fury. Toscanini chided him for grandstanding, but this in-and-out tease worked well with German and Latin American houses, which particularly enjoyed the punishment of a loud flirtation.
Let Me Clear My Throat:Essays -
Let Me Clear My ThroatEssaysFrom"Hey, Big Spender!"
To hear that girly voice escape the concertmaster’s staff and push into secular, structural ecstasy must have felt like a peep show from behind the veil. In [the castrato] Farinelli’s highest note, they might have heard a terrifyingly private sound, one usually made by a woman, smirking at them from the mouth of a breathtakingly lovely man. Maybe the women felt anyone who sang sounds so close to their own must understand the root tone of the noises women make.
Did men feel the same way two centuries later, upon hearing a square-jawed, shoulder-padded Lauren Bacall hit a baritone C2 for “put your lips together and blow?”
Let Me Clear My Throat:Essays -
Let Me Clear My ThroatEssaysFrom"Harpy"
The third scream, I think, is the scream that won it. You can hear me lose a battle in my throat. You do not have to assume that I will be mute for days afterward; you know it. Because on the e of that last “Stella!”, the sound sinks lower into my neck and starts ripping. Imagine the margin of a piece of paper torn, notch, by notch, from a spiral notebook, or an anvil dropping through floor after floor of a cartoon tenement. I did not tell myself to make this hurt, but there I am, punching lower and lower into myself to see what comes up. The noise is just awful, but it is mighty loud.
Let Me Clear My Throat:Essays
“In each essay, Passarello takes us on rambling, but carefully controlled walks that duck into alleys, wind through backstreets, beckon us into little mazes of looping associations, and often end up far from where they began . . . Her keen eye for the particular dovetails with an uncanny ear for the journey a sound takes, producing sensuous and noisy sonic portraiture.” —Atlanta Journal-Constitution [on Let Me Clear My Throat]
“Standout pieces include a biography of the most famous scream in Hollywood history; a breakdown of the relationship between song and birdsong; and an analysis of the sounds of disgust. Akin to: A dinner party at which David Sedaris, Mary Roach and Marlon Brando are trying to out-monologue one another.” —Philadelphia Weekly [on Let Me Clear My Throat]
"In a brilliant combination of rigorous study and conversational tone, actor and essayist Passarello has created a remarkably entertaining and thought-provoking look at the human voice and all of its myriad functions and sounds . . . A wonderful collection for any reader and every library. Highly recommended.” —Library Journal, starred review [on Let Me Clear My Throat]
“The beauty of Elena Passarello's voice is that it's so confidently its own. She's not selling her subjects. She writes with the kind of calm assumption of interest you make in a good friend (if a good listener) over dinner. But what she's saying is always unexpected, and full of information. I began randomly with her essay wondering what the space aliens will make of 'Johnny B. Goode' on the Voyager gold record, and couldn't stop after that.” —John Jeremiah Sullivan [on Let Me Clear My Throat]
Elena Passarello hovers above the little moment in history with wise wonder. Passarello writes about singing, screaming and shouting, and she gives voice to her subjects (pun intended) with erudite and lyrical prose. Her curiosity and capacity for insight and linguistic invention are boundless. And she brings uncommon verve, passion and precision to the art of the essay. The subject of her first book of essays – the voice – is fundamental to human experience, yet she writes of it in ways that are unique – and fearless. When she looks at something she finds interesting, the judges write, it’s as if she says, “Let me see what’s down that road!” And she runs down that road as fast as she can.