The Wrong Kind of Woman
A Novel
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
August 24, 2020
In her entrancing debut, McCraw Crow traces the impact of second-wave feminism and the antiwar movement in the early 1970s on a New Hampshire college campus. After Virginia Desmarais’s husband, Oliver, dies from a brain aneurysm, she and her high-school-age daughter Rebecca are left to pick up the pieces. Both Virginia and Oliver taught at the elite all-male Clarendon College; after Oliver’s death, Virginia befriends a group of faculty feminists known as the Gang of Four and joins their efforts to bring coeducation and the women’s movement to Clarendon. Theirs isn’t the only movement that roils the seemingly idyllic campus: junior Sam Waxman, enraptured with Elodie, a radical activist, is drawn into planning increasingly violent actions against the Vietnam War, but becomes uneasy when Elodie sets her sights on Clarendon for its alleged “role in the military-industrial complex.” The author considers these events from multiple perspectives, as Virginia works to gain confidence in herself, Rebecca struggles to understand who her mother is becoming, and Sam’s actions at a fraternity party lead Virginia’s neighbors to blame the Gang of Four for the escalating radicalism on campus. The choice to present the characters’ desperate actions in shades of gray makes for engrossing reading. McCraw Crow’s smart and thoughtful story will ring true to those who witnessed the social upheavals of the ’70s.
October 1, 2020
Crow makes her debut with a novel set in America's tumultuous recent past. Virginia Desmarais is devastated when her husband, Oliver, dies suddenly of a heart attack just after Thanksgiving in 1970. Oliver was a professor at the all-male Clarendon College in New Hampshire, and Virginia fears she will struggle both financially and emotionally without him. Virginia becomes involved with the Gang of Four ?the only female teachers at the college?planning women's meetings and hoping to secure a job as a professor, if she ever finishes her Ph.D. Virginia doesn't want to uproot her teenage daughter, Rebecca, but she doesn't know if she can stay in a place that doesn't value gender equality. In the meantime, student Sam Waxman, who's also grieving Oliver, becomes embroiled in the growing unrest at Clarendon, bringing a different point of view to the mix. While this is a quiet book, readers will soar through the smoothly written prose and empathize with the strong characters. Suggest to those who loved Jennifer Weiner's Mrs.Everything (2019).(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)
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