Unless
by:
Carol Shields (author)
Reta Winters, 44-year-old successful author of lightsummertime fiction, has always considered herself happy, even blessed. That is, until her oldest daughter Norah mysteriously drops out of college to become a panhandler on a Toronto street corner -- silent, with a sign around her neck bearing...
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Reta Winters, 44-year-old successful author of lightsummertime fiction, has always considered herself happy, even blessed. That is, until her oldest daughter Norah mysteriously drops out of college to become a panhandler on a Toronto street corner -- silent, with a sign around her neck bearing the word "Goodness".
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780007154616 (0007154615)
Publish date: May 1st 2003
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Pages no: 336
Edition language: English
Category:
Novels,
Literature,
Cultural,
Book Club,
Adult Fiction,
Literary Fiction,
Drama,
Contemporary,
Modern,
Canada,
Canadian Literature
Reta Winters has many reasons to be happy, among them, her three almost grown daughters, her twenty-six year relationship with their father, her work translating the larger-than-life French intellectual and feminist Danielle Westerman, and the modest success she has had with her own novel. Then one ...
Reta Winters seems to have it all, a successful career as an author, a comfortable home, a loving relationship with her husband/not-husband and three daughters, and good friendship. However, when her oldest daughter, Norah, drops out of college and is found panhandling on a Toronto street corner wea...
I am so sorry that the world lost Carol Shields. What an amazing writer. I will, one day, write a review of this book but every time I begin I give up because I cannot capture it correctly. Odd, because it is one of my favorite books.
I found this to be a fairly honest look at a woman's psyche. While it was not stream of consciousness, it could have been. The way that thinking of her daughter's childhood brings her back to her childhood. By the way, I relate greatly to her childhood. The girl that was written could have been ...
a really nice and subtly powerful tale of coming of age into feminism that reminds us of how painful the realization is that as women, our voices are never as loudly heard as male voices. that, as women, we are simply not afforded the same credit as our male counterparts.