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Becky Burgess grew up longing to escape the overcrowded, shabby house where her fisherman father and gentle mother raised seven children in undisguised poverty. She studies the women she sees on television: the way they speak, dress, act. She knows she's every bit as smart and pretty as they are. Once she makes the rest of the world notice, the rewards will come her way, rewards she will never, ever, willingly give up. A Becky Sharp of the malls, she seeks a way up and into the light of the media. Mary Burke does well by her ladies. As a cleaning woman to the affluent of the Boston area, she never fails to be on time, meticulous, respectful. What none of her clients know, and must never guess, is that at sixty-one, Mary is homeless. Once she lived as they do, until her husband "traded her in" and her children made lives that don't include her. To outward appearances so different, Leila, Becky, and Mary share the same longings: to be seen for who they are, to be valued, loved, but most of all, to have a physical and emotional home that can't be taken away. And as their dramas unfold, Marge Piercy probes their minds and hearts sharing the frustration, rage, determination, and joy that thread through every woman’s life. Leila, Becky, and Mary are a triumph - characters who keep us turning the pages, and linger in our minds long after their stories are told. "Marge Piercy can seat 15 strangers around a Thanksgiving table,
and by the time dessert is served you'll know all of them. Her paragraph
on Leila's interview techniques for talking with battered women is a
miniature master class. These characters are so authentic, you'll want
to shake them: 'Leave that creep!' 'Get a shrink!' "Work at Legal
Seafood!' " "It would be a public service to distribute THE LONGINGS OF WOMEN
to anyone facing the flu or a long train journey. Marge Piercy's 11th
novel id addictive, engrossing and remarkably successful in replacing
the reader's reality with its own. And yet this examination of modern
American life is not an escape into fantasy but a window on the world
of hard facts." "What Piercy has that Danielle Steel, for example, does not is
an ability to capture life's complex texture, to chart shifting relationships
and evolving consciousness within the context of political and economic
realities she delineates with mordant matter-of-factness. Working within
the venerable tradition of socially conscious fiction, she brings to
it a feminist understanding of the impact such things as class and money
have on personal interactions without ever losing sight of the crucial
role played by individual's responses to those things." "Like a painter with favorite colors, Piercy has themes and elements
she returns to in every book. In THE LONGINGS OF WOMEN, she combines
them in three entwined stories that are the most interesting and consistently
balanced she has ever written." Mary, Leila's homeless cleaning lady, is a character to haunt your
dreams. Mary's plight generates the novel's anguished suspense. “Every new novel by Marge Piercy is cause for celebration. THE
LONGINGS OF WOMEN is a rich tapestry filled with passion and rage and
real love, a book that gets under your skin and stays with you long
after the last page has been turned.” “This is about the best account I’ve yet seen of the condition
of women in America during the recent past….It vindicates what
every woman over fifty already knows only too well, and presents young
women with a chance to gain wisdom without actually aging….I don’t
know when I’ve been so fascinated by a novel…What a book!” “Hurrah for Marge Piercy! Her novels are rich with fascinatingly
complex, sexy, and decent human beings; her prose is always insightful
and profoundly compassionate. THE LONGINGS OF WOMEN is no exception
to this rule. It is a spellbinding and passionate tale full of mystery,
erotic tension, and secret yearnings. Piercy’s world is as terrifying
as it is timely; it is also touching to the bone. You will not forget
Mary, Leila, and Becky, nor the surprising forces that drive their lives
through trauma, love, and even murder, to redemption. Piercy is a great
poet and a wonderful novelist, and THE LONGINGS OF WOMEN is as good
as everything else she has written.” “I very much enjoyed Marge Piercy’s THE LONGINGS OF WOMEN.
It is full of her special brand of tough compassion. If I was a bit
surprised at her answer to What Do Women Want, I also had to admit there
was much truth in it.”
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| Copyright 2005 Marge Piercy | ||||||||