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Mary Ann Cornelius' Little Wolf is an adventurous story about the
western frontier. We meet the "Generous, warm-hearted, and
strikingly handsome, Edward Sherman who "appeared a perfect type of
manhood." in New England and follow him to the Upper Mississippi
region. When Edward meets Little Wolf all excitement breaks loose
"Her beautiful, bewitching face had been half hidden by curls, and
covered with blushes, from the moment her faintness had passed off,
and, but for the twinkle of those mischief-loving brown eyes, and
certain unmistakable movements of her slight figure, she might have
passed for meekness itself. To those, therefore, who were
unacquainted with her peculiarly nervous and impulsive temperament,
the change in her appearance was rather surprising. With one sweep
of her plump little hand, she tossed back the ringlets from her
brow, and frowningly declared she wished she had killed them."
So This is Life is a wonderfully evocative account of youth that
will surely take its place among the classics of Australian
childhood. At age seven, after her parents' marriage broke down,
Anne Manne travelled with her mother and sisters from Adelaide to
the Central Victorian countryside to begin a new life. So This Is
Life is not a conventional memoir but a haunting and luminous
account told through stories - unexpected moments of epiphany -
where meaning, suddenly and sometimes shockingly, reveals itself.
Possessing an astonishingly faithful and vivid memory of the pain,
fear and joy of childhood; a sensibility keenly alive to the beauty
of the landscape, the fellow-creatureliness of animals and the
comedy, tragedy and dignity of the lives of the country folk she
grew up among, So This Is Life shows a powerful moral vision being
shaped, about the meaning of kindness, and the desolation of grief.
It depicts worlds as far apart as the faded gentility of former
goldfields wealth, and the patriarchal spivvery of the country
racetrack. Full of inconsolable pain but also impish humour, these
stories sparkle like gems.
In Love & Money, Anne Manne looks at the religion of work - its
high priests and sacrificial lambs. As family life and motherhood
feel the pressure of the market, she asks whether the chief
beneficiaries are self-interested employers and child-care
corporations. This is an essay that ranges widely and
entertainingly across contemporary culture- it casts an inquisitive
eye over the modern marriage of Kevin Rudd and Therese Rein, and
considers the time-bind and the shadow economy of care. Most
fundamentally, it is an essay about pressure- the pressure to
balance care for others and the world of work. Manne argues that
devaluing motherhood - still central to so many women's lives - has
done feminism few favours. For women on the frontline of the
work-centred society, it has made for hard choices. Eloquently and
persuasively, Manne tells what happened when feminism adapted
itself to the free market and argues that any true definition of
equality has to take into account dependency and care for others.
'It is falling fertility ...above all else, which gives women a
political bargaining chip of a new and powerful kind. Policy
makers, formerly deaf to mothers' needs, will have no choice but to
listen to them.' - Anne Manne, Love & Money
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