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Paperback Angels and Aliens: A Memoir Book

ISBN: 0312204299

ISBN13: 9780312204297

Angels and Aliens: A Memoir

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

InAngels & Aliens, Mary Morris once again sets out on the road, this time as a single parent, wandering with her baby daughter through Southern California. Posing as a believer, Morris infiltrates New... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Moving on and up; a woman's personal fulfillment

It takes a brutally honest author, as Mary Morris is, and has done, to admit what she did for love. The sacrifices Mary made on behalf of her lover and father of her baby is basically the spinal cord for the novel. Her search for life's meanings and attempts to reconnect to a world so devoid of personal responsibility by this man open up painful recollections, yet serves as a foundation to offer her fresh experiences and rich sources of humor and honesty which are skillfully revealed. Let me say right off that this is not just another "man bashing novel". It would be truly unfortunate for a reader to be unable or unwilling to see beyond the appalling behavior of her partner and not appreciate how brave she is to allow this information to be shared. The fact that he is professionally influential is a sad reflection on the perception of the public. Personally he is manipulative and deceptive, or, also known as "married with children." Providing for his "first" family and their priorities, he makes promises AND children (not by his first wife, obviously) he can not and will not keep. Do not ask him for his time, he has "too many commitments". Electing to buy an expensive pure bred puppy to give as a present to his legitimite son, he sends ROSES for his and Mary's daughter's first birthday. Never a cent to feed, clothe or care take her, he neglects all responsibility for his fatherhood. Left to babysit for only one hour, he forgets where the baby is in favor of a televised ball game. When confronted by Mary, wakened and shocked into an incredulously terrified alertness , he notices the baby poised at the electric socket, her little finger wet and ready to probe. He is, however, unwilling to divert his attention from the TV. Obviously relieved that mom has come to HIS rescue, he returns to the game oblivious to the consequences of his behavior.The attraction of this novel is, therefore, dependent on Mary's awakening. The pages will turn rapidly with anticipation and your senses will be alert, preparing for all possibilities. It is difficult not to relate, she effectively taps into so many facets of complicated relationships. The need to protect her child is life altering and she finds the strength to make the decisions that must be made. With an inquisitive nature, she allows herself to examine alternate beliefs and applications with a sense of humor and reasonable doubt. Willing to admit to her own faults, her history is offered with no apologies and some outright laughs. A traveler memoir author, her trip to the west coast with her baby daughter reads like a novel. True to the spirit of the west the angels and aliens were her companions along the way.

A Very Creative Approach to Memoir Writing

The "travel" part of this travel-memoir is all internal. And that is well since the inner journey is the most important part of any travel. Morris' roller-coaster ride through motherhood and a blighted relationship is brilliantly portrayed without the syrupy sentimentality that usually occurs in this genre. She is brutally honest about herself, and yet one can not help but understand her plight and feel her pains. She openly admits her shortcomings and I found this very heartening because that is the one thing many writers can not achieve--self honesty at the cost of ego. Her prose is startlingly simple and deceptively profound. The whole thing really is about a year in the life of a very lonely woman, struggling to make a life for herself and finding her soul. The sidekick storyline about the counter cultures of New Age hippies and alien cults is really just that: a supporting structure, something to weave into her own story and provide a reflective surface for herself. This book is no academic exploration of the wacky side of Southern California living. It is a very tender look at one life.It seems that Morris did find a happy ending to her story although it is unfortunate that she did not elaborate on how it came about. I think there are many secrets to happiness and wish that Morris would have shared a bit more of her discovery. But, then again, maybe that's the thing about artists in general: they are destined to leave us wanting more. This is no conventional travelogue or memoir. It breaks new grounds. And we should applaud the author for that.

Moving & Magnificent

I loved it. Mary Morris travels West this time and gets it just right. With an unfailing eye for detail, Morris takes us on a journey through a Southern California that's every bit as pumped up with hope as it was during the Gold Rush. A single-mother and writer, Morris herself might be considered both the angel and alien of her title. There are New Age encounters to be sorted through and a true love hovering in the East that needs to be put to rest. Through it all, Mary Morris lets us into her heart with language that is both spare and poetic, deeply moving, and magnificent.

Like reading someone else's diary...

As a memoir, this book read like a diary, for better or worse. Mary Morris writes very well and this is probably the reason the book held my attention. Someone who wants a strongly plotted book may not be as engaged as I was, since the "plot" is simple -- how she deals with being a young single mother, and the relationship with the child's father. She uses the backdrop of California and "new age" movements as she moves back and forth between her woes and her visits to various "new age" and Las Vegas players.

READ THIS BOOK!

this is such a cool book! i loved it so,so much, from start to finish! i wasn't a reader before and now i only read mary morris' books! this book made me fall out of my chair laughing when she flew across a famous church on a tiny string 80ft in the air while people below were getting self pleasure watching her. i found it very funny that is was a true story and it had really happened. now i always laugh when i think of church. there were also little funny bits of humer when she made fun of life in California. i was drawn to this book and i think you will to once you get by the first page. i finnished the book in three days and that's good for a 304 page book. i really encurage readers and nonreaders to read this book.
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