Personal memories of the sort her Chatelaine readers adored -- a remarkable life story seen through the window of her relationship with her mother. Every woman's relationship with her mother is... This description may be from another edition of this product.
It isn't often that three members of a single family write their memoirs--in fact, the only instance I can recall are the books published by the three women of the Maynard family. Fredelle Bruser Maynard wrote innumerable women's magazine pieces as well as "Raisins and Almonds," the story of her girlhood in rural Canada. She followed it up with a more revealing volume, "The Tree of Life," published soon before her diagnosis with terminal brain cancer. Joyce Maynard, the prolific American novelist and journalist, discussed her family in book form in 1998 in "At Home in the World." Her older sister, the wry, reserved Rona, first chose a career as an editor, not as a writer. "My Mother's Daughter" is a tender, frank, marvelous discussion of how Rona grew up with a forceful, frustrated mother. Fredelle had a Ph.D. in English literature from Radcliffe, yet was able to find teaching jobs only spottily during and after her first pregnancy at the end of the 1940s. Her husband, Max, also was frustrated: a gifted painter, he received real recognition for his art only toward the end of his life. He supported his family (just barely) teaching English at the University of New Hampshire with no more than a bachelor's degree. His alcoholism affected all three Maynard women profoundly, as Rona describes. She married and became a mother quite young, juggling university classes, and eventually became editor of Canada's foremost women's magazine, Chatelaine. Rona insisted that the position was "a ten-year job," and kept her word: resigning after a decade to pursue a career as a writer and speaker. In time, she found her own true voice by listening to other women's stories. When interviewing women for magazine articles, she notes, her subjects were most likely to ask, "What did the other women say?" Yet in this memoir, Rona does not hide behind them, demonstrating how her journey as an editor, writer, wife, mother, sister, grandmother, and friend molded her clear, empathetic voice. It is definitely one worth listening to: "My Mother's Daughter" is the best memoir I've read in quite some time, and Rona's website (www.ronamaynard.com) offers up frequent--and most welcome--food for thought. This book may take a little searching-out, but it is well worth the effort. Five stars, and then some.
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