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In the early 1970s, Tarn Wilson's father quit his job as the
Brookings Institution's first computer programmer, packed his
family into a converted school bus with "Suck Nixon" painted on the
side, and headed for the Canadian wilderness. He planned to give
his two young children an Edenic childhood, free from the shadows
of war, materialism, and middle class repression. Between each
lyric chapter, told from the child's point of view, Wilson
incorporates "artifacts" that reveal larger cultural forces shaping
her parents' decisions: letters, photographs, timelines, newspaper
clippings, excepts from radicals approaches to child rearing. In
the space between the child's vision and the adult context, readers
are invited to consider the gifts and burdens of a counterculture
childhood.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R383
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Discovery Miles 3 100
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