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Writing in an Age of Silence. [Paperback]

Sara Paretsky (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)


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Paperback, 2007 --  

Book Description

2007
By author, VI Warshawski novels, exploration of political and literary dissent, especially after 9/11. includes personal experiences


Product Details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Verso (2007)
  • ASIN: B000QFWOC6
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #9,708,966 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Sara Paretsky is the award-winning creator of the V I Warshawski detective novels. When Sara introduced V I in Indemnity Only in 1982, she revolutionized the mystery novel. By creating a female investigator who uses her wits as well a her fists, Sara challenged a genre in which women were traditionally either vamps or victims.

V I is the quintessential urban woman. She grew up in the shadow of the old steel mills on Chicago's Southeast side and knows her way around every alley in town. She's a street fighter, a singer, a bit of a clothes horse, and a woman of great intensity and passion.

So how much like V I is her creator? They certainly come from very different places. Sara grew up in rural Kansas where she attended a two-room school. She continues to believe the high point of her life came at the age of twelve when she was picked to play third base for the Kaw Valley District 95 baseball team.

Bleeding Kansas, Sara's 14th novel, is set in the part of the Kaw River Valley where Sara grew up.

Sara first came to Chicago in 1966 to do community service work in the same neighborhood where Martin Luther King was organizing. It was a time of fierce passions in the city and in the country as people fought over racial justice, the rights and wrongs of the war in Vietnam, and women's rights. Sara has always felt that that summer changed her life forever, and when she finished her undergraduate degree at the University of Kansas, she came back to make Chicago her home. Some of the history of that summer is recounted in her essay collection, Writing in an Age of Silence.

Like V I, Sara likes to sing, in an amateur way, has a hopeless passion for the Cubs, loves Italian shoes'and is obsessed by the search for the perfect cappuccino, so much so that she even went to cappuccino school.

In other academic ventures, Sara received a PhD in American History and an MBA from the University of Chicago. In 1976, she married physics professor Courtenay Wright. The two live in the city of Chicago with their wonder dog Callie. Their lives are made brighter by their adored granddaughter, Maia.

Sara shares V I's passion for social justice. She founded Sisters in Crime in 1986 to support women readers and writers in the mystery world. To give back to the community, Paretsky established the Sara and Two C-Dogs Foundation, which primarily supports girls and women in the arts, letters, and sciences. She has endowed several scholarships at the University of Kansas, and has mentored students in Chicago's inner city schools. She serves on the advisory boards of Literature for All of Us, a literacy group for teen moms, and Thresholds, which serves Chicago's mentally-ill homeless.

Sara has received numerous awards, including the Diamond Dagger for Lifetime achievement from the British Crime Writers Association, the Gold Dagger for best novel for her book Blacklist, and the honorary degree of Doctor of Letters from several different universities. Sara's books have been translated into almost thirty languages.

 

Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

21 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gritty Life of a Writer of Gritty Mysteries, July 28, 2007
It's hard to say I enjoyed this book, because it's not about fun. I can't even recall a touch of humor. The author makes no effort to engage her audience, beyond high quality writing and an emotional intensity that rises from each page.

Paretsky's title covers both her childhood background and her reaction to living in George Bush's America.

As a child, Paretsky received nothing but discouragement and put-downs from her parents and siblings. Yet she and her brothers all turned out not just well, but outstandingly. All have graduate degrees (Paretsky herself has a PhD in American history) and have done well. It would be interesting to ask a family therapist where this resilience came from.

Mystery fans will enjoy learning how Paretsky's life influenced the V. I. Warshawski series. Paretsky became influenced by classic detective writers while she was supposed to be studying for her American history degree. She deliberately created a female version of the hard boiled detective, drawing on settings she knew and real people in her own life.

Some reviewers didn't care for Paretsky's attack on contemporary America, but I got the feeling she was angry and determined to use the platform she holds as a prominent writer. She's always been a force for good (as were her parents and at least one grandparent).

Paretsky writes a great deal about the Patriot Act - a horrifying piece of legislation that apparently allows police to search and seize property - and people - without a warrant.

This discussion alone makes Paretsky's book would be worth reading. It's terrifying to read about a woman who (according to Paretsky) was arrested because her social security card listed her married name and her passport her maiden name (or vice versa).

Paretsky's discussion of women writers was an eye-opener for me: I had no idea that women writers had to fight for reviews and publication. Today we take for granted the best-sellers by Marcia Muller, J. A. Jance, Sue Grafton and Paretsky herself. I wish she had written more about founding Sisters in Crime and about her relationship with some other writers.

I disagreed only when Paretsky claims (p. 76) that prominent women - Condoleeza Rice, Carly Fiorina, Katie Couric - are thin because they want to "disappear." In fact, it is hard for a woman to achieve prominence unless she is attractive. Being attractive means being slim, even thin. Madeleine Albright was exceptional. But media like to feature attractive women, making them even more prominent. Would Carly Fiorina have gotten as far as she did if she were heavier and less attractive? We will never know.

Paretsky has given us some rare insights into the way she experiences life, past and present. She expresses the helplessness and frustration so many Americans feel - a sense of returning to McCarthyism and worse. The last few pages are lyrical and strong without slipping into sentiment.

It's not a comfortable read, but the book will be hard to forget, well written and not nearly long enough. It's hard to say I enjoyed this book, because it's not about fun. I can't even recall a touch of humor. The author makes no effort to engage her audience, beyond high quality writing and an emotional intensity that rises from each page.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding!, August 4, 2007
It's rare that I'm impressed sufficiently by a book to contact the author, but "Writing in an Age of Silence" is such a book. As a Chicago native who lived in Kansas for many years, I was awed by Paretsky's ability to finely convey both areas so well, positioning both within her own formative experiences. Fans of V.I. Warshawski know that Paretsky has a wickedly sharp, funny pen, but here she turns that talent inward.

One caveat: those not familiar with Paretsy's other work might experience "Writing in an Age of Silence" differently, of course. In that case, I encourage you to read more of her work so that you can get a better sense of her voice. She's a remarkable writer, regardless of genre.
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11 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Thinking Person's Book, June 6, 2007
Sara Paretsky writes not only of her life but of the world that dramatically affects women and men .One need not have read Paretsky's work to appreciate the clearly feminist views she expresses. But it is not fair to simply label her with one ideology.She is a woman who has cared deeply all her life for the disenfranchised; those disenfranchised by race,gender,religion.

I felt as if I were reading the work of my doppelganger;especially the kind of ideas I shared with my students in a single-sex school. This book is no place to find the "warm,fluffy" philosophy that women or African-Americans have maintained whatever progress the world attributes to the women's movement or the Civil Rights Act.Rather Paretsky gives factual information to the contrary.

This book is wonderfully,lucidly written. It should be read not only by those who already share her beliefs;but,more importantly by those who are brave enough to challenge their comfort zones.
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