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4 Reviews
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31 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
a fine collection of stories,
By A Customer
This review is from: Sister Age (Paperback)
Having read about, but not having read, any of Fisher's previous books, I looked forward to reading this collection of short stories and short essays. Her original metaphors tickle a word lover's fancy: "Her firm, rounded old face as impassive as a postcard of Krishna" and "as untroubled as a dot of plankton." In 1936 in Zurich, Fisher bought an old oil painting of a woman she dubbed Sister Age. "I was going to write about growing old. ... I was going to learn from the picture. ... I planned to think and study about the art of aging for several years, and then tell how to learn and practice it." This volume, written when she was in her 70s, is the only effort she ever made to fulfill that ambition. She makes no direct statement about aging except in her Afterword, and there the valiantly borne disappointment is clearly stated: "Our housing is to blame," she said from her loneliness and separation from her children and grandchildre! n. She blames high-rises, cost of large homes, and socioeconomic events for the phenomena of old people living alone, not being touched, not basking in the daily light of children's smiles. Fisher's stories delight and baffle from time to time, and her view of old age as a lonely time, when one has to halfheartedly figure out what to do with one's time, travels from page to lonely page. It was rather like a black comedy without a punch line.
12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The final articulation of thoughts,
By Manola Sommerfeld (California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sister Age (Paperback)
I love the autobiographical touches of this collection. My favorite story is "The Second Time Around". I had many times thought of the naive generosity that Americans exhibit in contrast to Europeans, but had never been able to put this into words, until i read this story. I did not care much for parts of the book (the ghost tales, for example), but overall it is a worthy collection and an enjoyable read.
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
this is a really weird book,
By m morrissey "Mary morrissey" (L.A., CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sister Age (Paperback)
I haven't finished it either the word that comes to mind to describe it is "precious". But I don't really quite know what to think of it. If you want to read something completely "unlike" then pick it up for a penny! (Whatever the lady's thoughts about death and aging, she dead now, so you might as well buy the .01 priced volume.) I looked her up on wikipedia and she was very lovely, but I can't help thinking a bit of a blowhard. I imagine that perhaps dear Djuana Barnes could relate to this prose.
2 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Sister Age,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sister Age (Paperback)
I would have liked to know that even though I paid extra to expedite shipping, the time it took to receive the book was longer than if I had chosen the regular shipping option. I have no idea how good the book is because it arrived too late for my purposes. I feel like I wasted the money I paid, and will never do that again. I also am leary of the bookseller who made the promise to send the book earlier if I paid the premium. Since I did that, I feel that the bookseller did not keep his end of the deal.
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Sister Age by M. F. K. Fisher (Paperback - May 12, 1984)
$14.00
In Stock | ||