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44 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars touching the soul
I keep this book with me throughout my life. I first read it quite a few years ago, and felt it touch truths that I didn't dare go near previously. Thank you, Ms. Sarton, for sharing your world, for daring to articulate what really goes on in the mind. Everyone should give it a shot, and maybe another because its different each time I read her words. Sometimes...
Published on June 25, 1999 by gatazul@aol.com

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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars What solitude?
I agree with Gypsyrunner. AND: this woman was a hardly a solitude. She had many visitors and many trips away from home. Seems to me she didn't like being alone and at home much. Certainly not for any length of time. If you want a cwet good book about solitude, read Lionel Fisher's "Celebrating Time Alone" and/or Andre Rae's "Positive Solitude."
Published 5 months ago by BellaTerra66


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44 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars touching the soul, June 25, 1999
By 
This review is from: Journal of a Solitude (Paperback)
I keep this book with me throughout my life. I first read it quite a few years ago, and felt it touch truths that I didn't dare go near previously. Thank you, Ms. Sarton, for sharing your world, for daring to articulate what really goes on in the mind. Everyone should give it a shot, and maybe another because its different each time I read her words. Sometimes I'm receptive, sometimes not; after all, we are all reading through our own lens.
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71 of 78 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "The War Against The Unregenerate Self Goes On", April 28, 2003
This review is from: Journal of a Solitude (Paperback)
Written over a period of twelve months, May Sarton's Journal Of A Solitude (1973) is a meditation on life, living alone, romantic love, and the creative process.

Composed in diary form, the book was produced while Sarton was living alone in a small village in rural New Hampshire. By 1973, Sarton was fifty-eight years of age and an established novelist and poet who had known and corresponded with such literary luminaries as Virginia Woolf and Hilda Doolittle.

Journal Of A Solitude is a warm, touching, very human book, which, after its successful publication, became the cornerstone upon which Sarton's uneasy reputation has settled. But Journal Of A Solitude also reveals Sarton to have been something of an odd duck modestly dressed in the clothing, mores, and mannerisms of a gentile Belgian lady.

Sadly, what Sarton seems determined not to come to terms with is that she was a tepid, literal - minded poet as well as a less than first- rate literary novelist; this is important, because the lack of critical attention her work received ("What I have not had is the respect due what is now a considerable opus") is a constant theme of the book and source of tension. As a result, "ornery" Sarton shifts continuously between states of creative over appraisal and damning self recrimination. Sarton's quoted poems clearly reveal a lack of lyrical skill and an absence of any visionary power whatsoever. Though she states, "Whatever peace I know rests in the natural world," Journal Of A Solitude also reveals a tender-hearted animal lover and enthusiastic gardener who nonetheless appears to lack a higher sense of nature as a symbol, sign, or metaphor for the transcendent forces evident in human reality.

Badly advised by friend and poet Louise Bogan to "keep the Hell" out of her work, Sarton, accepting Bogan's suggestion, struggles daily with a devastating, irrational temper, depression serious enough to drive her to suicidal states, loneliness, and, at only fifty-eight, a sense of herself as "old, dull, and useless." Sarton, who appears to have surprisingly little self-knowledge for a person of her maturity, is haunted by reoccurring image of "plants, bulbs, in the cellar, trying to grow without light, putting out white shoots that will inevitably wither," but doesn't consciously relate this image directly to herself or her difficult present. When a close friend visits for several days, Sarton is incensed when the woman makes an offhand comment about the faded state of a vase of flowers (though as the photographs included reveal, flower arranging was not among Sarton's talents). Clearly, some or most of Sarton's "hell" should have gone into and fueled her creative work, as it does in the case of most artists. Is appears that there were many things in her life that Sarton simply didn't want to confront or acknowledge.

Sarton makes contradictory statements about God and her religious beliefs, commenting first that writing poetry is her method of communicating with God, but later states, "I am not a believer." Though she frequently writes at length about the emancipation of women and the need for the abolition of gender roles, she also makes generalized statements like "nurturing is women's work," and believes that "blacks" have the "grace and instinct and intuitive understanding" necessary for the nursing profession. Today, Sarton's expression "we have so much to learn from them ("blacks")" sounds like well-intended but unconsciously smug pandering.

Sarton was not an intellectual, but the limited perspective cumulatively elaborated in her novels and poetry found a ready audience in "nice" like-minded women for whom more challenging authors like Muriel Spark, Isak Dinesen, Virginia Woolf, Jean Rhys, Katherine Anne Porter, or Jane Bowles apparently represented an arduous uphill climb. What the book does illustrate is the danger of making an unquestioning habit of "impeccable" WASP manners and politeness over a lifetime. Sarton, her close friends, and colleagues all appear to exist in a brittle world where truthful communication and direct, honest criticism are to be strenuously avoided in the name of continued social niceties.

Sadly, the success of Journal Of A Solitude had an ultimately negative effect on Sarton's career, as she began producing journal volume after journal volume (Recovering, At Seventy, After The Stroke, Endgame: A Journal Of The Seventy-ninth Year, etc.), of which only The House By The Sea, which immediately followed the present volume, had the same freshness, integrity, and lack of self - consciousness. Sarton was soon to become a cottage industry for her publishers, turning out further volumes of banal poetry--"Moose In The Morning"--and, like Edith Sitwell in old age, simply publishing too much without due editorial consideration.

Journal Of A Solitude does reflect a genuine, shadow-casting human presence as well as a state of being which many people, especially the creative, the introverted, and those moving uncertainly towards later life may respond to fully. Sarton's moments of anxiety, despair, and doubt, as well as her stoicism, fortitude, and courage, are sincerely expressed, touching, and inspiring. Sarton accurately perceived herself to be country-loving, intelligent, and serenity-seeking individual who put a high premium on the simpler aspects of life. But for an author who had over twenty books published by 1973 and who was on a first-name basis with some of literature's most notoriously critical figures, Sarton was a surprisingly unsophisticated person. As a result, it is the fallible human being, and not the creative writer, who shines most brightly in Journal Of A Solitude.
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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An intriguing introduction to Sarton, January 25, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Journal of a Solitude (Paperback)
The first of Sarton's Jornals, this one introduces the readers to the players -- both human and animal -- that make return appearances in her subsequent journals. In these pages, Sarton provides us with a view of one who looks closely at the everyday. She examines larger themes as well creating a journal that speaks plainly of the seasons and the cycles of life.
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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars soothing reading, July 11, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Journal of a Solitude (Paperback)
reading this book was like meditation for me. She is a wonderful writer. I keep her journals close to my bed. If I've had a particularly stressful day I will pick up her journal and start reading. Like a Matisse painting, her words are "mental rest for the weary."
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent!, May 3, 2006
By 
Seehorse72 (Danbury, Connecticut United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Journal of a Solitude (Paperback)
If you're into reading memoirs, this is exceptional. Her clarity of thought and her ability to portray her feelings into words is unsurpassed, in my opinion. I enjoy her prose so very much. I can find myself relating to so many of her feelings and thoughts despite the difference of age and time. This is a great read.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring, January 26, 2006
This review is from: Journal of a Solitude (Paperback)
I read Journal of a Solitude shortly after giving birth to my first child. I was alone in a new neighborhood with few family and friends around me and felt completely estranged from my former life as a professional woman working in New York city. May Sarton's story - shared in such a real and heartfelt way - has always stayed with me. Where are the May Sarton's in today's world? She was an extraordinary woman who was able to connect with a broad audience of readers, through the authentic sharing of her thoughts, feelings and experiences. I miss her work but am thankful that she left behind a wonderful legacy.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars captivating, January 15, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Journal of a Solitude (Paperback)
She's a person who's not afraid to touch the least glamorous aspects of our inner life! Absolutely captivating!
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Discretely out, December 3, 2000
By 
Lois Henderson (Pretoria, South Africa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Journal of a Solitude (Paperback)
How refreshing to find a work written by a woman who, though unafraid to state exactly who she is, nevertheless does not need to stand and SHOUT IT OUT! As a fellow lesbian and poet, I would like to commend May Sarton's journal both for its discretion and lack of temerity. To think that she wrote her most meaningful work several decades ago, yet one can so easily relate to it today! Her universality speaks for itself - I am sure that very few women will be unable to resist responding to her revelations, whatever their standpoint on sexuality. I just wish so very much that I could have had the privilege of corresponding with her.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Spectacular., July 7, 2005
This review is from: Journal of a Solitude (Paperback)
I've read most of Sarton's journals and this is by far the best. Her writing allows the reader to enter her mind. It's so honest, so raw. I've reread Journal of a Solitude a few times over the years; its one of those books to keep on your shelf, and read to get back in touch with the things that matter.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful insight..., May 10, 2007
This review is from: Journal of a Solitude (Paperback)
This book was beautiful. I loved reading it. It felt delicate to me...the insights shared within the pages...but it was compelling. I picked it up and read a few pages whenever I had the chance. Loved it.
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Journal of a Solitude
Journal of a Solitude by May Sarton (Paperback - October 17, 1992)
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