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The Bitch in the House

Women Tell the Truth About Sex, Solitude, Work, Motherhood, and Marriage

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Despite more power and choices than ever before, women are still angry — that's not necessarily a bad thing, as anger is what continues to open the door for change. In this collection, 15 women speak boldly and passionately about choices they've made — about sex, children, love and work — and explore what's working and what is not. Their essays — always provocative, honest, witty and wise — are the culmination of the lessons of the past two decades, the 'me' years and the therapy years, the years that have taught women to express themselves and acknowledge their needs. As celebratory as they are critical, these brilliant essays reflect the truth about life.

Audio contains the following essays, written and read by the contributors:

Introduction — Cathi Hanauer

Getting the Milk for Free — Veronica Chambers

Crossing to Safety — Jen Marshall

Moving In. Moving Out. Moving On. — Sarah Miller

Papa Don't Preach — Kerry Herlihy

I Do. Not.: Why I Won't Marry — Catherine Newman

Killing the Puritan Within — Kate Christensen

My Mother's Ring: Caught Between Two Families — Helen Schulman

Attila the Honey I'm Home — Kristin van Ogtrop

The Myth of Co-Parenting: How It Was Supposed to Be. How It Was. — Hope Edelman

Daddy Dearest: What Happens When He Does More Than His Half? — Laurie Abraham

Crossing the Line in the Sand: How Mad Can Mother Get? — Elissa Schappell

Married at 46: The Agony and the Ecstacy — Nancy Wartik

The Fat Lady Sings — Natalie Kusz

What Independence Has Come to Mean to Me: The Pain of Solitude.The Pleasure of

Self-Knowledge. — Vivian Gornick

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  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      This is one of those cleverly titled packages that work better in print than as an audiobook. A husband (Daniel Jones) and wife (Cathy Hanauer) capitalize on the success of Hanauer's tell-all women's essay compilation, THE BITCH IN THE HOUSE, with a new collection of essays read aloud by the mollified and mortified husbands living today's version of middle and upper-middle-class life. Most of these skilled writers (yet very unskilled readers) belong to the latte-and-angst club, questioning the balance in their marriages as they juggle home, job, kids, budget. Here's where the battle of the sexes meets yuppie hell...so if you love daytime talk shows, buy this audiobook immediately. D.J.B. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 17, 2002
      In the spirit of Virginia Woolf, who wrote of killing the "Angel in the House," these 26 women—mostly professional writers—focus on the inner "bitch": the frustration, anger and rage that's never far from the surface of many women's lives. They sound off on the difficult decisions of living with lovers, marrying, staying single and having children. Those who haven't chosen the single life are almost always frustrated by their mates' incompetence or their toddlers' neediness. (They reserve special scorn for overly laid-back live-in lovers content to live off a hardworking woman's checkbook.) While a handful of entries touch other sources of anger—being criticized for one's weight, simultaneously caring for ailing parents and a young family, coping with a husband who's out to win his baby daughter's loyalty—most focus on the love vs. work problem. For many of these women, this means a struggle over the right to be a bitch and inflict unpleasantness on others for the sake of a higher goal (one's work) versus the feminine imperative to "make nice." While unbridled rage is terribly cathartic—even in print—it's the quieter moments that provide more food for thought. Daphne Merkin's observation that she's "more equipped to handle the risks of loneliness than those of intimacy" and thus better off divorced, or Nancy Wartik's thought that "some compromises might actually be healthy," will ring true for many readers. Others may find it comforting to know that even smart, articulate, successful women can have deeply unsettled inner lives. Agent, Elizabeth Kaplan. (On sale Sept. 17)Forecast:With a classy list of contributors (ranging from Natalie Angier to Vivian Gornick), and first serial rights sold to
      O magazine,
      Elle,
      Glamour and
      Self, this one will find an enthusiastic readership.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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