From Publishers Weekly
Readers disgusted by sugarcoated, mushy sentiments will welcome this latest installment from the prolific Roiphe (Up the Sandbox; Fruitful). Neither antiromantic nor hopelessly giddy, Roiphe's book takes an honest look at what happens after couples say "I do," and asks why the institution has survived at all. These days, "You don't need to get married to have children and you certainly don't need to get married to have sex and you don't need to get married to make a mark in this world. Why on earth would anybody bother?" One answer, in Roiphe's gentle prose: "if you live in a railroad station sooner or later you board a train." Her remarks about parenthood can be caustic: children reveal a marriage's weak spots in much the same way as "[the] blue light the police use to reveal blood spots." In Roiphe's mind, the "predicament" of coupledom is tricky: it offers security, but may be boring; fidelity breeds trust, but limits experience; parenthood leads to emotional growth and a smaller, more routine world. Roiphe draws her conclusions not only from her own multiple marriages but also from a trove of cultural sources from Shakespeare and Madame Bovary to The Sopranos. Her ideas, though informed by feminist sentiment, are not shocking: despite her doubts, she ultimately sides with monogamy, motherhood and marriage a safe move, which guarantees her a sympathetic audience of liberal female readers still hankering for the altar.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
These two new memoirs consider the vagaries of marriage. Roiphe, whose numerous fiction and nonfiction works often treat women's and family issues, here picks up that theme by analyzing formal marriage from a variety of perspectives. Thorough and readable in her presentation, she considers all the arguments, dangers, objections, and benefits. In the end, although she does not want to "condemn anyone or legislate anything," she concludes, "We need...a hand in our hand. That is the justification for marriage." Marriage, she argues eloquently, can survive the initial romantic dreams, financial and midlife crises, boredom, everyday noises in the bathroom, and sudden appearance of children. Anderson relates her own experience repairing a marriage that was falling apart. When her husband announced a job move, she declined to follow and instead spent a year in semi-isolation, an experience she recorded in her memoir A Year by the Sea. The present title follows up that year. Her husband decides to retire, join her by the sea, and remake his own life. Although this work lacks the detail of Roiphe's book, it is a popular, readable account of a couple resettling for each other. Discussion questions for readers' groups are included in the back. Public libraries will want to consider both titles for their collections. [Anderson's book was previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 11/1/01.] Nancy P. Shires, East Carolina Univ., Greenville, N.
- Nancy P. Shires, East Carolina Univ., Greenville, NC Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.