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Calling It Quits: Late-Life Divorce and Starting Over
 
 
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Calling It Quits: Late-Life Divorce and Starting Over [Hardcover]

Deirdre Bair (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 23, 2007
This is the first book to reveal the truth about the exploding phenomenon of late-life divorce, which has resulted in a seismic shift in modern relationships. Now, in a finger-on-the-pulse examination of this growing trend, Deirdre Bair, New York Times bestselling author and winner of the National Book Award, explores the many reasons why older, long-married couples break up. Having conducted nearly four hundred interviews with ex-wives, ex-husbands, and their adult children, Bair reveals some of the surprising motivations that lead to these drastic late-life splits, as well as the surprising turns life takes for all concerned after the divorce is final.

Although the standard assumption is that husbands trade in their spouses for younger trophy wives, Bair has found that, most often, women initiate these divorces because they want the freedom to control how they will live the rest of their lives. The realization may appear to happen suddenly, but Bair shows how it often takes many years and much careful planning before the ultimate “Eureka!” moment. We see that for one woman it happened when she asked her husband to help in the kitchen and he shouted angrily for her to keep her voice down so he could hear the television. For one couple, the decision to end their marriage arrived when the wife condemned their unmarried adult daughter for having a baby and her husband sided with the daughter, leading both partners to realize that they had never had anything in common. One woman in her eighties, married for fifty-three years, woke up after transplant surgery and announced to her husband: “I don’t know how many years I have left, but I do know I don’t want to spend them with you.”

Bair describes current trends in late-life divorece, including the growing use of “mediators,” whom many couples see as lower-cost alternatives to lawyers. She also provides fascinating examples of how people cope in the years after divorce. Divorce changes older peoples’ sex lives in surprising ways, and Bair is candid in discussing what really goes on in their bedrooms. She presents the stories of those who elect to stay single after divorce, of others who remarry immediately, and of those who are puzzled to find themselves divorcing yet again. As Bair’s subjects rebuild their lives, the reader wills see new possibilities for living in “the third age,” and may be inspired to realize that there is indeed life after divorce–and plenty of it.

Important, eye-opening, and truly groundbreaking, Calling It Quits is essential reading for an entire generation and its children,–and an acclaimed author’s most personal and most universal work.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The inspiration for this book came from a magazine survey on late-life divorce in AARP that Bair came across in her dentist's waiting room. It hit a chord with Bair, whose own marriage had ended in divorce after 43 years, and she set out to find the stories behind the statistics. Bair, an award-winning literary biographer (Samuel Beckett), turned her sights on a group of men, women and adult children who have been affected by late-life divorce. She found that more divorces were initiated by women, which puts into question the assumptions both that men always leave for younger women and that ex-wives seldom find love again. But the several hundred North Americans and Europeans Bair talked to hardly constitute what she terms a "social earthquake." Nor does Bair offer any advice or answers as to why some long-term marriages go on the rocks. (Curiously, the divorce she stands to have the most insight into—her own—she is less than forthcoming about.) Bair's intent is simply to ask questions in the hope of furthering a dialogue on the subject. Readers will not find answers, but those going through a late-life divorce will encounter personal stories, all-too human ones, that they will identify with. (Jan. 30)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Acclaimed biographer Bair investigates a growing worldwide trend of divorce among older couples of long-standing unions. In a collection of stories, Bair gets at the grievances of husbands and wives who ended marriages late in life, how and why they came to the wrenching decision, and how they have lived their lives afterward. As often as possible, Bair interviewed the husband, wife, and adult children to get all sides of the story, and there are nearly 400 interviews with people from various economic and social backgrounds and sexual orientations. Among the well-to-do, Bair most often found the classic late-life divorce story of a husband leaving the marriage for a new trophy wife; otherwise, women were more likely to leave than men and often found companionship on their own terms--no more picking up after a man. The reason behind the trend of so many late-life splits: people are living longer, have more disposable income, and want their later years to be more satisfying. A fascinating and occasionally heart-wrenching look at marriage and life expectations. Vanessa Bush
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; 1 edition (January 23, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400064481
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400064489
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.1 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #597,002 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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20 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars You Aren't Alone, October 22, 2007
By 
Andy Bea (San Antonio, TX) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Calling It Quits: Late-Life Divorce and Starting Over (Hardcover)
The timing of the publication of Calling it Quits was auspicious for me. In January of '06 I said to myself, "You're 66 years old. Do you want to spend whatever time you have left with somebody who is always pissed?" The answer was "No." I filed for divorce and after 49 years and 4 days I regained control of my life. About a month after the final decree, Calling It Quits had a small mention in AARP Magazine. The book didn't have all the answers to my "What now?" questions, but it did help me realize that I was not unique. My story, with slight variations, was told on every page. And, like misery, newly discovered happiness and relief love company.
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22 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars pet rocks, July 19, 2007
This review is from: Calling It Quits: Late-Life Divorce and Starting Over (Hardcover)
I am almost finished reading this book, after a friend who is divorcing after thirty years of marriage recommended it to me. I am not married and am not getting divorced, but I was fascinated by the book anyway.

The main lesson I took from the many stories in the book is that the richer the man is that you're married to, the more you are likely to get screwed in the marriage and in the divorce. The CEOs come across as the worst possible men to be married to, and also the worst to get divorced from. They have multiple affairs and lie about them, and they hide assets, and they do this to serial wives.

The most shocking thing I learned from this book is that many judges and lawyers, even female ones, have very little respect for women who have been homemakers most of their lives. They call these women "pet rocks." I am serious. Never mind that some of them probably have mothers of their own who weren't full-time career women. Ex-husbands who are looking forward to a comfortable retirement think that their wives can retrain and start working in their mid-seventies! And sometimes they get lawyers and judges to agree with them! One of my friends worked at a low-wage job and raised her children for years. When she got divorced, the judge decided that she could be "rehabilitated" (his words), as if she was a felon. This meant that she could be trained for higher wage work and therefore did not deserve much in the way of support from her ex-husband. Now she's a teacher, a barely middle-class job nowadays.

The sad truth seems to be that raising children well by hand one at a time is never going to get you any respect or gratitude, even from people who say they think that children need a mom at home. Our culture only respects hyper individualism, me-first greed, and capitalism run amok.

This is not to say that old women shouldn't get divorced. They should. My point is that we should change our public policy so that homemaking and childrearing get some respect, in the form of wages and benefits. The other possibility is that we should stop doing it until we got some respect, wages, and benefits.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mesmerizing, May 4, 2007
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This review is from: Calling It Quits: Late-Life Divorce and Starting Over (Hardcover)
It's quite true that Bair offers no nostrums for late-life divorces that shock adult children and other family members or friends. It's equally true that reading these stories if you're looking at a (very long) retirement with someone you have little in common with is to touch base with a personal reality NEVER otherwise discussed in mainstream media. You'll never see 75-year-old women on Oprah who want out of very long marriages but they definitely exist.

It's no mystery why. Men retire from a *job*, usually with a whole set of fantasies about their future, but women are not allowed to retire from taking care of men and houses because it's not "real work." The only way to "quit" is to separate and ultimately divorce.

Don't think Grandma might want to dump Grandpa? Read this book!
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