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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Engrossing and Insightful
I really might have given this book a four-star rating, because I would be inclined to save the five-star ratings for Faulkner-level fiction, but I wanted to offset the tepid reviews of other readers. I liked this book a lot.

I picked the book off the shelf for its bizarre title, and I was very glad that I did. This book works wonderfully on a number of...
Published on January 18, 2005 by Eager Reader

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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars I didnt' like it as much as I'd hoped I would
THE WEDDING OF THE TWO-HEADED WOMAN by Alice Mattison



Here's a rather unusual title for an unusual book: THE WEDDING OF THE TWO-HEADED WOMAN, written by Alice Mattison. The title is in reference to a headline taken from a tabloid newspaper that the main character, Daisy Andalusia, sees at the home of one of her clients. She uses this in her...
Published on August 10, 2004 by Ratmammy


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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Engrossing and Insightful, January 18, 2005
By 
Eager Reader (Washington, D.C.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman: A Novel (Hardcover)
I really might have given this book a four-star rating, because I would be inclined to save the five-star ratings for Faulkner-level fiction, but I wanted to offset the tepid reviews of other readers. I liked this book a lot.

I picked the book off the shelf for its bizarre title, and I was very glad that I did. This book works wonderfully on a number of levels---I will be thinking about it for quite some time. It's not your typical easy-read mystery novel, but it is nonetheless extremely engaging. It's deep enough to satisfy my English major origins, and accessible enough to hold me to the end, despite my overloaded lifestyle and constant interruptions from my children. This is an extremely insightful book that rings very true, both emotionally and philosophically.

The themes---or, rather, what I perceived as the themes---are complex and thought-provoking. The author doesn't dole out easy answers to moral and philosophical questions---life doesn't work that way, and neither should literature. What are some of the themes, as I perceive them? Oh, well........Personal moral responsibility, loyalty, the interconnectedness of human beings, moral relativity, emotional intimacy, how one judges the "goodness" of another human being, the emotional fall-out from keeping (or not keeping secrets), intellectual snobbery, the purpose of art..... I may be completely off base, but these are the issues that this book raised in my mind. Oh, and I disagree with the person who found the book bizarre. The characters, and even the plot, rang very true for me.

Whether you like or dislike this book, I predict that it will be very memorable for you.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best writers I had never heard of before, March 18, 2006
By 
Samantha G. Zeitlin (la jolla, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman: A Novel (Hardcover)
Unlike most of the other people who wrote reviews here, I was racing home from work each day to devour more of this book. I love Mattison's writing, and the voice of her complicated main character in this novel is easy to hear and endlessly interesting to listen to. Although I'm not sure I would like Daisy in real life, I couldn't put this book down because I loved having access to the internal struggles and seeing how they often contrasted with her actual actions.

Although I sometimes found Daisy's choices illogical or hard to understand, I think that is the point of this sort of book: it's a specific character study, as much as it is a collection of observations about human nature in general. The slightly fragmented style of the story didn't bother me at all, because I had no trouble keeping up, and in general I like nonlinear stories. (note: LA Confidential, the movie, was way too fragmented for me).

Daisy is a fragmented, complicated person, and she is the one telling the story, so it makes sense that the stories are a little bit fragmented and interwoven. That's how real women are! I think Mattison has real insights that more readers should enjoy.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Love all of her books, June 12, 2010
By 
Susan J. Houser "gandycat" (Pittsburgh, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I've read several of her books and have loved all of them. This novel isn't perfect, there were times where it was hard to like or identify with Daisy. But what Mattison always does best for me is create complex women. You might not like Daisy but you keep coming back to find out what she'll do next, and hope that she evolves. I also appreciate that she portrays female friendships realisticly and without stereotypes.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Something Different, May 9, 2006
By 
debrahart (Silver Spring, MD) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman: A Novel (Hardcover)
A very original if flawed book. The character is obstinately real, honest, even as annoying as some people we know. Auden's line, "You will love your crooked neighbor with your croooked heart" comes to mind. The parallel story of the play-within-a-novel doesn't work terribly well, and it doesn't begin to resonate with the depths of the dimensions in Mattison's The Book Borrower. September 11 jumps in, a Deus Ex Machina, to save the plot with Something Really Important. Still, a very compelling and refreshing read.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An extremely unique treat., April 7, 2006
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This review is from: The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman: A Novel (Hardcover)
I am in the middle of the book and totally love it! The author has done an amazing job of writing the way women think.... overthinking, justifying, overanalyzing. The author also has done an amazing job of writing how we behave.... sometimes illogical, both good and bad. I am finding the book fascinating and often see myself in the main character. I am looking forward to reading the author's other books
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Filled With Meanings Deeper Than the Obvious, August 18, 2005
This review is from: The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman: A Novel (Hardcover)
Daisy Andalusia is in her fifties but may be as fickle as a twenty-year-old as far as romance goes. Pekko, her former lover turned slumlord husband, has the unfortunate honor of having only half a wife. Daisy's preoccupation with sex makes her a fairly undesirable life mate, because the wind blows her this way and that.
She organizes clutter for other people. And, in the process, she makes herself just available enough to satisfy her own curiosity about the lives of her so-called clients. At least one of those clients helps her with her sexual addiction as Daisy goes about cheating yet remaining unfulfilled.

The title of the story, The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman, is taken from a tabloid but says so much about the life Daisy has created for herself. Will her risky behavior leave her with nothing in the end?

The reader will consider this book either a collection of symbolism or a book of foolishness. This book is worth the read and worth a bout of quiet reflection.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A Little Too Strange, November 14, 2004
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This review is from: The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman: A Novel (Hardcover)
Having read Alice Mattison's "Book Borrower," I expected more from this book, especially after reading editorial reviews about it. I know there was all kinds of symbolism in this book, and it wasn't that hard to get, but mostly I just didn't care enough about any of the characters, except maybe the husband Pekko. Mostly I just thought it was kind of silly, with not much to redeem it.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars I didnt' like it as much as I'd hoped I would, August 10, 2004
By 
Ratmammy "The Ratmammy" (Ratmammy's Town, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman: A Novel (Hardcover)
THE WEDDING OF THE TWO-HEADED WOMAN by Alice Mattison



Here's a rather unusual title for an unusual book: THE WEDDING OF THE TWO-HEADED WOMAN, written by Alice Mattison. The title is in reference to a headline taken from a tabloid newspaper that the main character, Daisy Andalusia, sees at the home of one of her clients. She uses this in her experimental acting group and from there, the group creates a play based on a woman with two heads.



This probably sounds rather eccentric and enigmatic. It is. The book is written in a style in which the reader gets bits and pieces of dialogue or scenes that all come together as the story progresses. We slowly learn a little more about Daisy and what makes her tick. Daisy is the focal point, and the play she is participating in symbolizes more than just a woman that has two heads, as the play starts to evolve and grow.



Daisy herself is a woman that seems to have a great need to control everything in her life. She obsesses over sex, is used to being free and single, and has just married her long time lover, Pekko Roberts, who is a slum lord (but is in denial about it). Daisy is in business for herself, taking on clients that need help cleaning up. Her clients live like pack rats, living in homes that are fire hazards and resemble any house cleaner's nightmare. She finds satisfaction in cleaning up and organizing these homes, but only homes with a somewhat organized mess. Her latest client, Gordon Skeetling, becomes one of her obsessions, and not only does he become a favorite client of sorts, he also helps her with her other obsession, sex.



The book takes place over an eight-month period, culminating shortly after the terrorist attacks of September 11th. It is interesting that the author chose this time period to parallel the life of Daisy Andalusia. It appears the author was making a statement, stating that the problems Daisy and her friends were having over this play they were creating, paled in comparison to the events of that fateful day.



But all in all, this book I found to be a bit too much. There was a lot of symbolism that I found too cryptic for my tastes, and although I think a different type of reader could have enjoyed this book, I couldn't get into it. I was disappointed and felt that it was a bit over my head, which I am very embarrassed to admit. I'm giving this book 3 stars, mostly for effort. If I had enjoyed it more, I would have bumped it up a notch.
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The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman: A Novel
The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman: A Novel by Alice Mattison (Hardcover - August 10, 2004)
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