A Short History of Women: A Novel

Front Cover
Simon and Schuster, Jun 16, 2009 - Fiction - 239 pages
National Book Award finalist Kate Walbert's "A Short History of Women" is a profoundly moving portrayal of the complicated legacies of mothers and daughters, chronicling five generations of women from the close of the nineteenth century through the early years of the twenty-first.

The novel opens in England in 1914 at the deathbed of Dorothy Townsend, a suffragette who starves herself for the cause. Her choice echoes in the stories of her descendants interwoven throughout: a brilliant daughter who tries to escape the burden of her mother's infamy by immigrating to America just after World War I to begin a career in science; a niece who chooses a conventional path -- marriage, children, suburban domesticity -- only to find herself disillusioned with her husband of fifty years and engaged in heartbreaking and futile antiwar protests; a great-granddaughter who wryly articulates the free-floating anxiety of the times while getting drunk on a children's playdate in post-9/11 Manhattan. In a kaleidoscope of voices and with a richness of imagery, emotion, and wit, Walbert portrays the ways in which successive generations of women have responded to what the Victorians called "The Woman Question."

As she did in her critically acclaimed "The Gardens of Kyoto" and "Our Kind," Walbert induces "a state in which the past seems to hang effortlessly amid the present" ("The New York Times"). "A Short History of Women" is her most ambitious novel, a thought-provoking and vividly original narrative that crisscrosses a century to reflect the tides of time and the ways in which the lives of our great-grandmothers resonate in our own.

 

Selected pages

Contents

London England 1914
19
Dover Delaware 2003
37
Cambridge England 1898
55
Wardsbury England 1914
69
GraysheadonHeath England 1919
83
Patagonia Argentina 2004
101
Cambridge England 1899
137
VJ Day New York City New York 1945
163
New York City New York 2007
177
Wardsbury England 1914
201
New Haven Connecticut 2007
225
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About the author (2009)

Kate Walbert has published fiction and articles in the Paris Review, DoubleTake, The New York Times, and numerous other publications. The recipient of fellowships from Yaddo, MacDowell, and the National Endowment for the Arts, as well as a grant from the Connecticut Commission on the Arts, she is the author of "Where She Went," a short story collection. Her most recent novel is called A Short History of Women. Walbert teaches writing at Yale University and lives in New York City and Branford, Connecticut.

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