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47 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wide range of essays - and a suggestion, March 6, 2006
These 27 essays provide a wealth of opinions about the range of emotions, controversy and ambivalence that can fill the minds and hearts of mothers. Even those who think they know their values before giving birth may have a profound change of heart. Some decide to stay home. Others go stir crazy and go back to work. Then there are the women who face life-threatening conditions (cancer or something else), have children with disabilities or don't yet have children but are exploring the dilemnas that may face them.
The most wrenching essay for me to read featured a woman who'd already made it through some very, very tough years as a single mom to two young children (her husband deserted the family), struggling with the indignities of welfare and making do as best she could. After she starts to become more successful, meets a decent man and has another child, she learns she may die within "8 months"....that is the grim prognosis...and that fact radically changes her life...forever. I won't go into more detail about that section because I don't want to spoil the suspense of you, the reader, discovering what happens next...but believe me, you won't be able to predict it.
Very few of these women seem to be totally at peace with their decision, at least not without a period of angst and guilt (is this the universal norm for mothers?). Ambivalence and even guilt seemed to be the order of the day, something I could really relate to.
I'd strongly suggest reading this with A Perfect Madness (another exploration of Motherhood) as it goes into greater depth when it comes to researching the challenges facing mothers today. Taken together, the two books provide a wealth of information. Both are honest and insightful.
In Mommy Wars, you'll get a host of viewpoints, some full of ambivalence, some full of guilt and some fully comfortable with their choice -whether it is working or not working outside the home. You'll feel affirmed with some pieces, challenged by others and perhaps alienated by yet others.
No matter the viewpoint, reading this book made me feel more connected to other women, since I've had both guilt about working and affirmation at well. My personal choice was to focus on parenting, primarily because my work schedule was not family friendly.
Reading this book made me realize yet again (since this isn't the first book of its kind to appear) that I was not alone. Parenting is hard. Working can be hard, too. Juggling the two can be...well....very tricky. Sometimes it isn't workable at all. Other times you make it by the seat of your pants. But connecting with other women, whether on the pages of a book or at the park or over lunch..can serve as inspiration and support. It doesn't hurt to have some more of that.
What ISN'T fully explored in this book (beyond what is implied in the personal essays) are the economic realities of work versus staying home. I wish there'd been a bit more detail about that. The reality is that women who bring in under $10.00 an hour may actually lose money by working (and create a higher tax bill, actually reducing income even more). Even so, the payoff may be worth it, since working may satisfy a need to be with other adults, build skills,etc. In time, as the kids grow older and day care isn't necessary, the income may build again.
For other mothers, work isn't worth the sacrifice, no matter how hefty the salary. In the years since I've been a parent, I've known several lawyers, accountants and others who've left work when their children started having trouble at school. The teenage years seemed particularly rough and dropouts from the work force seemed higher in my circle of friends at those times.
But I'm speaking only personally. Read this book and you'll get a wider range of viewpoints about the emotional and financial and spiritual benefits and costs of working. I confess that I'm one of those moms who don't want to miss the time I have with my children, not for work. But I am lucky enough not to have to make that choice - yet.
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34 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Well-intentioned, but falls flat, March 7, 2006
This anthology, as well-intentioned as it is, has one very significant short-coming: the amount of mothers this anthology missed equals the majority of mothers they are trying to market this book to in the first place. These are all professional writers, either formerly or currently or on the side. As with the similar anthology, "Bitch in the House" (Harper, 2003), these essays contain mostly professional women of middle and upper-middle-class families with dreams of success in their chosen field of writing and a husband who doesn't seem to exist.
Because of this, "Mommy Wars" exposes only one very thin layer of the entire picture. If the editor wanted to end the invisible cat fight that she claims all mothers engage in, why didn't she flag down those twenty-six minivans?
In fact, the message this book sent to me was that the "war" only exists between mothers of past, present or future success, in writing or other competitive, professional writing-related fields. To the mothers in this essay, everyone is out to get them, out to compete, because of the cutthroat business they are a part of. Perfectionism, to them, is synonymous with feminism, with motherhood. Success is that mark of a good mother. Success in her children, well, that's even better. That's perfect.
On a more positive note, a handful of mothers had very unique experiences (unique in terms of the content of this anthology). The only essay I truly felt moved by was the first, "Neither Here nor There" by Sally Hingston. This essay left a very poignant message: the mother admitted that she was a bad mom after years of thinking she was perfect. She was brave enough to write that she called her sick teenage daughter a "whack-job" in front of the therapist, who scolded her after her daughter said it was fine; her mother says that sort of stuff all the time.
To me, the mark of a good mother is not that goal of mutual success in herself and her children and the awards won by both, but the mother who can admit that she has failed. One who can admit, honestly, that being a mother does not make her infallible. That her hopes and dreams may not suit her offspring.
The other essay that stood out was a hardened look at two-generations of postpartum depression and how it wasn't a choice to stay home that caused the mother so much pain-it was something beyond her control. Something that had already been in her life, yet she was unaware of it. Here is a real internal conflict; one that is impossible to escape without help. One that any mother could experience, regardless of her career.
Unfortunately, many of the essays blended together in a boring shade of, "Who cares?" The tiresome repeats consisted of: mother has writing job of some sort, mother gives it up for children, mother attempts to go back to work or thinks about going back, mother does or does not, mother angsts over decision and sees her faults in other people, husband is pointless, there is no conclusion. I stopped after stuffing myself frustrated with a majority of them, then declined to do more than skim the rest.
Take the advice of reviewers of "Bitch in the House", and doubtless this anthology too, and find more variety. If the professional writing mom continues to be evaluated as the representatives of the rest of the women in the world, I won't listen anymore.
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23 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A great addition to an important discussion, March 10, 2006
As a middle-aged mother with a child in college, I read and reviewed this book with a "retrospective" lens, and truly enjoyed it. The Mommy Wars have been smoldering for decades, and it's very interesting to follow the dialogue between mothers who are nearly 20 years younger than I am. I applaud Ms. Steiner for tackling such an unwieldy project, and for re-opening this discussion for another generation of women.
That said, many of these fine essays were written by women who can afford nannies and/or household help -- whether they work or stay home with kids. In my part of the Midwest, WAHMs and SAHMs enlist (or beg) neighbors and grandparents for help with childcare and, in many cases, the frustrating search for good daycare centers is also a huge topic of conversation. But where I live, calling your sitter a nanny is considered an affectation. The essays in this book are written, primarily, from the East and West Coasts, as well as suburbs near Washington, D.C., where "nanny" is a household word.
No matter which side of the "war" they defend, the pieces tend to echo the sentiments of well-heeled women in the film , television, or publishing industries. Of course, this makes for some great reading. But it's very important to consider that perspectives from the East and West Coasts are often quite different from those of women who raise kids and work in the South or Midwest -- both culturally and economically.
Knowing that parents in my part of the country are also passionate about this issue, I would love to read more viewpoints from, say, middle America, or the deep South, where many women do not have the same choices as women who work in publishing and/or live in tony suburbs.
That said, there are some terrific pieces of writing in this book, and they are all worth every mother's precious reading time. Lois R. Shea's essay, "Big House, Little House, Back House, Barn," really stood out from the rest. Writing from rural New Hampshire, Shea shared an intriguing view of a lifestyle much different from the New York/Washingon DC/California pieces in the book. Shea's voice is honest, funny, and down-to-earth -- pure delight, and something new.
Let the dialogue continue!
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