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Big Women
Flamingo (HarperCollins) First British Edition, 1997 Published in the U.S as Big Girls Don't Cry Atlantic Monthly, 1998 Cover art by Max Schindler | |
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From the book jacket:
Fay Weldon's new novel blasts into the Brave New World which women - and their men- fought for, agonised over, and thought they would inherit. This is the story of women when they were wimmin: of that unforgettable blossoming in seventies England of hope, freedom, equality, and sisterhood; and of what happened next … The novel is everything we expect from Fay Weldon, and more: not just a work of literature but an energising leap into the pool of social complacency, a feisty, no-holds-barred portrait of four women's attempts and failures to create a new life. There's the feminist publishing house, founded one balmy evening at sedate No. 103 Chalcot Crescent in a flurry of argument, peace-making and naked dancing. There's Layla: noisy, darlingish, high-profile: 'I am the only right-thinking feminist there is. It's all the others who are out of stop.' And Alice, the academic, the philosopher, the - eventually - Glastonbury witch. And Nancy, boring, sensible Nancy who is the only one with any business nous. And Stephanie - the one who leaves her husband and children to embrace politics, men, other women... Their stories are intertwined with twenty years of all of our lives - blissful, rage-filled, treacherous, redemptive. It is a novel, too, about money, power, pain, and, definitely, Men.
Bio from the book jacket: Fay Weldon was born in England and raised in New Zealand. Her work is translated into most world languages. She lives in London. | |
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| Flamingo (HarperCollins) British softcover reprint Published July, 1998 |