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Anne Roiphe

Auteur de 1185 Park Avenue: A Memoir

20+ oeuvres 1,060 utilisateurs 57 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Anne Roiphe writes a biweekly column for the New York Observer.

Œuvres de Anne Roiphe

1185 Park Avenue: A Memoir (1999) 170 exemplaires
Epilogue: A Memoir (1960) 100 exemplaires
Lovingkindness (1987) 90 exemplaires
An Imperfect Lens: A Novel (2006) 86 exemplaires
Fruitful: A Real Mother (1996) 65 exemplaires
Married: A Fine Predicament (2002) 47 exemplaires
If You Knew Me (1993) 40 exemplaires
Pursuit of Happiness (1991) 33 exemplaires
Up the Sandbox! (1970) 29 exemplaires
Secrets of the City: A Novel (2003) 15 exemplaires
Torch Song (1977) 9 exemplaires
Long Division (1972) 7 exemplaires
Les eaux de la colère (2021) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Free to Be... You and Me (1974) — Contributeur — 484 exemplaires
Growing Up Jewish: An Anthology (1970) — Contributeur — 122 exemplaires
Sugar in My Bowl: Real Women Write About Real Sex (2011) — Contributeur — 106 exemplaires
The Jewish Writer (1998) — Contributeur — 52 exemplaires
Up the Sandbox [1972 film] (1972) — Original novel — 9 exemplaires

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Very good book. daughter is on the street, drugs, 3 abortions, Mother expects to find her one day in the back alley with overdose. daughter goes to Israel with a boy and gets involved into a Jewish religious cult. Mother is educated, women's rights advocate and has a difficult time with her daughter giving up "all her self and her "rights" to be in this religious cult. The mother has a difficult time choosing "which is more important--living according to religious cult rules, getting married, having 12 kids, all about taking care of husband and family...or freedom of the open world--where the daughter was "lost". very good book… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
evatkaplan | 2 autres critiques | Jan 23, 2023 |
FRUITFUL (1996) is a book I've had on my shelf for several years now, from a bulk buy when I'd just read a few other Anne Roiphe books, most notably her later memoirs, EPILOGUE and ART AND MADNESS. I first read her work more than fifty years ago, when her UP THE SANDBOX! was a bestseller and was adapted to the screen with Barbara Streisand starring.

This one is a kind of combination or hybrid of memoir and a deep dive into the feminist movement which resurfaces about once a decade. Roiphe herself seems ambivalent about it, and is definitely doubtful of the more strident man-hating members. She has been married twice, divorced the first time (from an alcoholic writer), and widowed the second time after a long happy marriage. She has struggled as a single mother and a stepmother, and has three daughters, one of whom is a recovered drug addict. And the real focus here is motherhood, something Roiphe loved, and had even wanted more children. She quietly notes that, despite the pill and legalized abortion, the "pull to reproduce was not a political decision but deeply primordial, a response to rhythms and tides not always accessible to reason."

And, regarding men, "there are many things that I have liked about men." And she goes on to mention their smell, their hairiness, how she feels "protected" by men and also how she has protected them. She was obviously very lucky in her second marriage, from all she has to say about her husband (a doctor).

I took my time reading this book, because it gives you so much to think about - husbands, wives, fathers, mothers, childhood, becoming adults and more. As an old school husband/father, patterned after my own dad, I found myself often wincing guiltily as Roiphe talked about the new kind of father, who is more involved in hands-on parenting. Although FRUITFUL was published more than twenty-five years ago, it remains extremely relevant when it comes to the core ideas here - feminism, parenting and, most of all, mothers and motherhood. I will recommend it very highly - to BOTH mothers AND fathers.

- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
TimBazzett | 2 autres critiques | Dec 17, 2022 |
A young American woman feels alienated and lost in 1980's America. Rebellious against her feminist mother, after trying drugs, promiscuity and other alternative lifestyles finds herself in Jerusalem joining a ultra-right-wing religious women's yeshiva. A place that will train her to marry and bear many children. Is this yeshiva a cult? Is Andrea spiritually and morally corrupt because of her mother's influence?
½
 
Signalé
bezap | 2 autres critiques | Oct 22, 2021 |
This book started off a bit slowly for me, but in the end I was surprised how much I enjoyed it -- the story of a feminist, secular Jewish woman's grief over her daughter's decision to join a Jerusalem yeshiva. What made the book good was Roiphe's ability to portray both "sides" with sensitivity and compassion. Definitely a worthwhile read.
1 voter
Signalé
LudieGrace | 2 autres critiques | Aug 10, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
20
Aussi par
5
Membres
1,060
Popularité
#24,290
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
57
ISBN
61
Langues
1

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