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The Slippery Year
 
 

The Slippery Year [Kindle Edition]

Melanie Gideon
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (82 customer reviews)

Print List Price: $14.95
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Sold by: Random House Digital, Inc.
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Book Description
“We are all so curious. Hungry for the truth. If only we could ask the questions we really want to ask of each other and get the real answers. Like how many times a month do you have sex? What prescription drugs are you on? Are you happy? Really happy? Happy enough?”

For anybody who has ever wondered privately Is this all there is, Melanie Gideon’s poignant, hilarious, exuberant meditation, The Slippery Year, chronicles a year in which she confronts both the fantasies of her receding youth and the realities of midlife with a husband, a child, and a dog (one of whom runs away). She reflects on the exigencies of domesticity--the need for a household catastrophe plan, the fainting spell occasioned by the departure of her nine-year-old son for camp, the mattress wars, and the carpool line. With tenderness, unsparing honesty, and uproarious wit, Gideon brings us back again and again to the sweetness of ordinary pleasures and to life’s most enduring satisfactions. She captures perfectly that moment right before everything changes and the things we have loved forever begin to fall away for the first time.

The Slippery Year is the story of a woman’s quest to reignite passion, beauty, and mystery and discover if “happily ever after” is a possibility after all.


A Q&A with Melanie Gideon

Question: What is a “Slippery Year”?

Melanie Gideon: Simply put, a Slippery Year is a year in which we are in the process of transformation. We’ve got one arm in the coat of our old life (a coat that no longer fits us--the sleeves are too short) and one arm in the coat of our new life (which doesn’t fit us yet either--the sleeves are too long). A Slippery Year is a call to awaken. Change is coming for you, whether you like it or not.

Question: Why did you decide to write about yours?

Melanie Gideon: Change came for me in the form of the tricked-out, jacked up, four-by-four van with a diesel engine and a cattle guard on its front bumper that my husband bought over the Internet. He had all these dreams of our driving to Baja in it, of living an adventurous life. Well, I hated the thing on sight. It was so enormous it barely fit in our driveway. Obviously this was his midlife crisis vehicle. But there was one problem. He wasn’t going through a midlife crisis--I was. In fact, he was sailing through midlife doing exactly what all the literature said you should do! Find new hobbies! Take up new sports. Ingest fish oil tablets. No, I was the one stuck, unwilling to push myself out of my comfort zone. Somehow, when I wasn’t paying attention (which was most of the time), I had slipped outside of my life, and I knew if I didn't do something about it I might slip out of my life for good.

Question: You write in your introduction: "I am one of the millions who is currently walking around in a daze, no longer recognizing herself, wondering 'Is this all there is?'" Do you think this is a uniquely feminine experience?

Melanie Gideon: No, I do not think this is unique to women! Are you kidding me? Our puppy wonders if this is all there is every day. I see it on his face when he’s done with his kibble, or when I give him one scratch behind the ear instead of two. “Is this all there is” is the human condition. Most of us are too smart to admit it, however, and for good reason, because people might want to throw eggs at you if you confess this. I felt guilty asking this question, especially because I had a lot. I had no right to complain. I had a wonderful partner and a healthy child and we had a house and we both had jobs. Even so, there was this flatness, this indifference. I had become an observer rather than a participant. Everybody, no matter what they have, still has something they need and long for. I wanted to feel my life deeply again.

Question: You have a caring, devoted husband and a precocious, loving son. You have a nice home and live within driving distance of a Trader Joe's. Are you worried about the reaction to a book where you question all that you have?

Melanie Gideon: For those of you who will not be slipping away to Italy any time soon but instead are attempting to open your eyes to your ludicrous and yet often miraculous lives, Montepulciano is a fruity, dry wine with soft tannins. Yes--of course I’m worried about people’s reactions. That’s why I put off writing a memoir for so long. What right did I have to write a memoir? I hadn’t suffered enough. I wasn’t different enough. You, know, I actually made a list of things I could write a memoir about. Things that set me apart--that were worthy of a memoir. It was a pathetic list. There was one item on it: I was a twin. This used to be a big deal. At least when I was growing up in the sixties before IVF. Now, being a twin has lost most of its cachet. You have to be a quadruplet or a sextuplet to write a memoir about it. Instead I decided to write about all the ordinary things that mattered: children, dogs, sisters, love, loss, the passage of time, and all the reasons to go on living when the only thing we can be sure of it that one day it will all end.

Question: You write: “Marriage changes passion. Suddenly you’re in bed with a relative.” What was your husband’s reaction to this book?

Melanie Gideon: Well, I wasn’t stupid. I didn’t let him read it until I was done. Then as I passed him the manuscript, I told him what he was holding in his hands was a love story--and he might not think that upon the first read, but give it a little time. My husband, being the wise, sweet, generous man that he is, agreed. A few months later, that is.

Question: How have you changed your life since you finished writing The Slippery Year, and what do you hope readers will take away from it?

Melanie Gideon: The Slippery Year began with a van. The van was really a metaphor for the adventure that was missing in my life. I like to think of this book as my van: writing it was my adventure. I only wish I could have ordered the book over the Internet--like my husband did with the van--and spared myself all that work. I hope readers will laugh and be comforted and perhaps see some of themselves in these pages. I wrote this book so I wouldn’t feel alone--alone in the carpool line, alone in my questions about marriage and motherhood, and alone in my attempts to make sense of my life. I definitely feel less alone these days. Especially since our puppy has peed on every carpet in the house, so wherever I walk I get a little reminder of how not alone I really am in the form of yellow stains that will not come out no matter what carpet cleaner I use.

(Photo © Jonathan Sprague)

Review

Best Books of the Year:  NPR and San Francisco Chronicle
 
“Gideon has written a love song to family and to life. What a lovely song it is…. One of the happiest books to cross our paths in a very long time. Kind ... loving ... funny ... wise.” —San Francisco Chronicle
 
Hilarious…. A sinuous journey—complete with skids and scraped knees—toward greater engagement with life . . . treated with humor and heart.” —Christian Science Monitor
 
“After a few chapters of one gorgeous and self-ridiculing sentence after another, you realize that Gideon doesn’t need to detonate her life to shake things up. There’s a perfect storm raging inside her head, and its hilarity is drama enough for anyone.” —San Francisco Magazine
 
“A self-deprecating, wickedly funny and mildly philosophical reflection on marriage, mothering, middle age and the march toward life’s meaning.” —Bookpage
 
“An honest, funny tribute to the way love can survive waves of doubt, miscommunications and highly dubious purchases.” —Redbook
 
“Gideon explores her pain, doubt, regret, and confusion as a wife and mother at midlife with great poise and insight and, ultimately, a gentle aura of hope.” —Elle
 
“By the end of the book I felt like I had just spent several hours knocking back drinks with an especially funny friend. Which is some of my highest praise.” —Book Bench (newyorker.com)
 
“With self-effacing humor, Ms. Gideon chronicles the mundanity and small epiphanies of everyday life.” —New York Times
 
“Gideon’s a deceptively smooth writer; her memoir’s packed with insights that sneak up on you.” —San...


Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 339 KB
  • Print Length: 226 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 030727067X
  • Publisher: Anchor (August 4, 2009)
  • Sold by: Random House Digital, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002IPZBBS
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (82 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #113,724 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

82 Reviews
5 star:
 (32)
4 star:
 (19)
3 star:
 (13)
2 star:
 (7)
1 star:
 (11)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (82 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

32 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Like a conversation with your most negative friend, August 3, 2009
By 
T. Sullivan (Chicago, IL United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Slippery Year (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
I actually expected more from this book because it sounded like it would be a very humorous and poignant look at midlife. Perhaps I set expectations too high because in actuality, it really wasn't that funny and not at all poignant. It's not that it isn't well written or entertaining, it's just that while reading it, I felt like I was having a light conversation over lunch with my most self-centered, neurotic girlfriend who leads a charmed life, but who incessantly uses sarcasm to complain about her issues, which don't rank as issues in most people's lives at all (like having her husband write her romantic texts every morning that she never responds to and instantly deletes). After finishing, I just wanted to go hug some puppies or something just to wash away her negative vibe. I'm sure that Gideon is probably a much better, deeper person than she lets on to be in this book, but in her attempts to be witty and self-deprecating, all she does is erode any chance for a real, honest connection with the reader. If you want funny, read David Sedaris or Erma Bombeck. If you want a good midlife memoir, read The Gift of an Ordinary Day by Katrina Kenison. This one is forgettable.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars a memoir of a codependent mommy, August 9, 2009
By 
fezabel (Chicago, IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Slippery Year (Hardcover)
This book shows very little about the author's marriage. Instead, it shows how self-indulgent, neurotic, & codependent the author is. She gets to her son's school a hour early to be first in the pickup lane so that her son doesn't think he's been abandoned. She freaks out after sending him to soccer camp and spends most of her time sniffing his clothes in his room because she doesn't know what else to do without her child. She doesn't even have a midlife crisis. She just tags along on her husband's crisis.

This book wasn't amusing or heart-warming as it is being described on talk shows & in other reviews. Avoid it and read something really worthwhile this year.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Portrait of a life that seems to frequently miss the point, July 14, 2009
This review is from: The Slippery Year (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
This book is a fast read that one could easily tackle in a lazy afternoon. I did just that, and on some level, I feel like I wasted a perfectly good afternoon. I believe the title perfectly suits this book. We see an account of a year in the life of the author and the nicest thing I can think of saying is it seems like she wasted an entire year of her life. This book is certainly not one that will lift the sprits and warm the heart.

As I read this book I kept going back and forth about how I felt about the author. More often than not, I was annoyed with her. She seems to have a very negative outlook on life. I'm not sure what exactly she is hoping to get out of life by detaching herself from her friends and family. Maybe that's why this book is "a meditation on happily ever after". Is she wondering where her happily ever after is? Sadly, I don't think Melanie Gideon is aware of that. When I wasn't annoyed with how she's frittering away her life, I felt pity for her. I can't help but think that this woman has essentially checked out of life and has decided to watch from the sidelines.

The book does have a small handful of humorous moments, but I feel that they are too few and far between. I suspect that I may have laughed out loud one or twice, but certainly not more than that. The sparse humor in this book is not enough to counter the negativity.

I do not see myself recommending anyone to buy this book. There's something about reading a book that oozes negativity and to some degree apathy that would make me not want to bother. Life is too short to fritter it away, and I'm afraid reading this book would be doing just that.
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