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WOMAN'S LIFE: THE STORY OF AN ORDINARY AMERICAN AND HER EXTRAORDINARY GENERATION Cheever, Susan 1994 30962 ABOUT THE BOOK Woman's Life: The Story of an Ordinary American and Her Extraordinary Generation -- An acclaimed writer takes a revisionist feminist look at what it means to be a woman, mother and worker today with this powerful true story of the life of Linda Green. How and why Linda goes from being the girl next door to starting a commune and experimenting with drugs to being a controversial suburban mother and teacher is the frame that holds this story together. FROM THE PUBLISHER Turning the idea of celebrity biography inside out, Susan Cheever explores the heart and mind of her generation with this powerful true story of the life of an ordinary woman whose experiences as a wife, mother, lover, teacher, and friend are a fascinating prism for readers of any generation. At forty-five, Linda Green is a statistical norm: a working mother of two children who lives with her second husband in a Boston suburb. But no life is a mere statistic, and the story of Linda Green has the trajectory and the power of a novel. At the age of five, pretty Linda was her parents' princess, at sixteen she was a cheerleader, but by the time she was twenty she and her high-school-sweetheart husband were moving down an uncharted road marked the 1960s. How and why Linda moved from being the girl next door to starting a commune and experimenting with drugs and open marriage to being the controversial suburban mother and teacher she is now is the frame that holds this story together. But it's Cheever's talent for intimately, and honestly, describing the unique social, intellectual, and psychological pressures women like Linda confront that infuses this story with its harsh, eloquent beauty. FROM THE CRITICS Publishers Weekly Linda Green, a 1960s hippie who lived on a Vermont commune, took LSD and let herself be pushed into an open marriage by her bullying, pot-smoking first husband, is now a suburban mother of two, a high-school Spanish and French teacher and a Boston lawyer's wife ``settled into a routine that is both conventional and bourgeois." But Linda, 46, is no sellout, in Cheever's ( Home Before Dark ) empathic, beautifully controlled portrait. Instead, she is emblematic of ``the average American woman, unrecognized, unknown, and often unappreciated, trying to hold it all together--family, job, health, attractiveness, sanity." Daughter of a Brooklyn hat salesman who moved his family to Passaic, N.J., Linda, by this account, was molded by a manipulative mother who instructed her to act as if she were always having fun. After her rebellious first marriage collapsed, she moved in with her former student, Clint Donahue, marrying him in 1978. Despite their considerable difference in age and religion (he's a devout Catholic, she's Jewish), their marriage has weathered crises--in no small measure, Cheever suggests, because of Linda's tireless accommodation to the needs of her husband and two daughters. Author tour. (June) Library Journal Cheever's initial idea for her biographical subject was a remarkable famous woman, but she decided instead on a supposedly average woman without the privileges and limited scope of most heroines. Cheever's revised thesis required a woman emblematic of her generation, and Linda Green, a 45-year-old schoolteacher with two children, appeared to be a likely candidate. Cheever fails to transform Green into an ``everywoman;" instead, she exposes and examines Green's strengths and weaknesses, manipulations by her family, and challenges in maintaining a balance between her professional and domestic life. While the changing values and attitudes of Green's generation do affect her outlook, this is really a case study of how certain pressures and conditions have affected the life of one person. Cheever has previously written in the biographical mode about her own family (Home Before Dark, Houghton, 1984; Treetops, LJ 3/15/91), and she is honest, compassionate, subjective, and voyeuristic, all which work to this book's advantage. Recommended for both public and academic libraries.- William Morrow & Company, Inc. 0-688-12194-2 / 9780688121945 Hardcover As New New York Price:
15.75 USD
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