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Living Out Loud

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
NATIONAL BESTSELLER • Anna Quindlen, hailed by the New York Times as “America’s resident sane person,” offers a collection of “engaging, fresh, [and] funny” (Chicago Tribune) essays about growing up, becoming a parent, spirituality, and more.
 
“The lightning bugs are back. They are small right now, babies really, flying low to the ground as the lawn dissolves from green to black in the dusk. There are constellations of them outside the window; on, off, on, off. At first the little boy cannot see them; then, suddenly, he does. ‘Mommy, it’s magic,’ he say.
 
“This is why I had children; because of the lightning bugs.”
 
The voice is Anna Quindlen’s. But we know the hopes, dreams, fears, and wonder expressed in all her nonfiction, for most of us share them. Quindlen first vaulted to national attention with her “Life in the 30s” columns for The New York Times, and this wonderful collection of her early work shows why this Pulitzer Prize–winning author remains in the spotlight.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 5, 1988
      In this collection of syndicated columns, based in the New York Times and called ``Life in the 30's,'' Quindlen gives ample evidence of why her reflections about herself, the progress of her life and feelings, resonate in a large readership. First, there is relevancy for the ``targeted audience who are in their 30s and share Quindlen's chronology of adulthood, career, marriage and children.'' The author's personal frame of reference informs her memorable articles. For example, recalling the death of her mother when the columnist was 19, Quindlen, oldest of five children in an Irish-Catholic family, speaks of beginning to fashion a life for herself. We share her humor and frustration as she raises two sons, Quin, now four, and Christopher, two, as she longs for a daughter and talks about her lawyer-husband (``I married the person inside the sports jacket''). Quindlen's columns on baby-boomers who negotiate traditional values, such as a piece in which she defines ``cultural Catholic,'' invite controversy; but there is universal appeal in her experi ences of the contemporary world, which she covers with elan and insight. 35,000 first printing.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 1, 1989
      ``In this collection of syndicated columns, based in the New York Times and called `Life in the 30s,' Quindlen gives ample evidence of why her reflections about herself, the progress of her life and feelings, resonate in a large readership,'' observed PW . ``There is universal appeal in her experiences of the contemporary world, which she covers with elan and insight.''

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  • English

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