Destined for a TV series, this marathon Lib seminar-cum-soaper pops
on about the plight of women as victims in contemporary society -
particularly those of middle years. Like Mira, who's been bred and
buttered-up to the "shit-and-string-beans" treadmill of suburban
marriage and motherhood. In first and third person, we study Mira's
childhood, sexual awakening, disillusions, early marriage,
childbearing, the move to the golden suburbs for days of little
kids and new friends: "the lazy life. . . it went nowhere. . . they
had not been chosen but had been automatically slotted into their
lives." But the lazy life also means the drift toward divorce,
affairs, the bottle, psychic batterings, even attempted suicide -
and the rumination: "You think I hate men. . . . I guess I do." So
Mira is divorced by dull Norm, and life begins at 38 - at Harvard's
graduate school, where she meets a group of fiercely-speaking-out,
feverishly-living women, including big Val, doomed to be shot to
death in a Lib protest demonstration. In the process of hoisting
her consciousness, Mira falls in love with nice and successfully
sexy Ben and brings her sons closer by her honest expression of
Feelings, but she does NOT Want A Child by Ben - so finis and
goodbye. Throughout, the women talk out relationships with men,
children, and each other in that heavy sweating-out, hanging-out
jargon that's long since lost the bloom, complete with aggrieved,
savage humor (on exclusion from male libraries and dining rooms:
"the real reason is sanitary. . . Splat Splat a big clot of
menstrual blood right on the threshold"). Awful things happen to
everyone, and the gut-wrenchers roll on like the toilet tissue in
the TV commercials - but this time the women squeeze the bejeezus
out of Mr. Whipple. (Kirkus Reviews)
A landmark in feminist literature, THE WOMEN'S ROOM is a biting
social commentary of a world gone silently haywire. Written in the
1970s but with profound resonance today, this is a modern allegory
that offers piercing insight into the social norms accepted blindly
and revered so completely. 'Today's "desperate housewives" eat your
heart out! This is the original and still the best, a page-turner
that makes you think. Essential reading' Kate Mosse 'They said this
book would change lives - and it certainly changed mine' Jenni
Murray 'Reading THE WOMEN'S ROOM was an intense and wonderful
experience. It is in my DNA' Kirsty Wark 'THE WOMEN'S ROOM took the
lid off a seething mass of women's frustrations, resentments and
furies; it was about the need to change things from top to bottom;
it was a declaration of independence' OBSERVER
General
Imprint: |
Virago Press Ltd
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Series: |
Virago Modern Classics |
Release date: |
May 1997 |
Authors: |
Marilyn French
|
Dimensions: |
198 x 126 x 36mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - B-format
|
Pages: |
526 |
Edition: |
New Ed |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-86049-282-2 |
Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
General & literary fiction >
Modern fiction
|
LSN: |
1-86049-282-7 |
Barcode: |
9781860492822 |
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