|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewWhere were you between Betty Crocker and Gloria Steinem? With that question in mind poets Pamela Gemin and Paula Sergi began collecting the poems in Boomer Girls, an anthology of coming-of-age poems written by women born between 1945 and 1964, give or take a few years on either side. The answers to that question fill this volume with the energy, passion, heartbreak, and giddiness of women's lives from childhood to adolescence to middle age. The poems in Boomer Girls are by unknown, emerging, and established writers, women who participated in the second wave of feminism. From Sandra Cisneros' ""My Wicked Wicked Ways"" to Barbara Crooker's ""Nearing Menopause, I Run into Elvis at Shoprite,"" from Wendy Mnookin's ""Polio Summer"" to Kyoko Mori's ""Barbie Says Math Is Hard,"" these poems call for us to celebrate (in the words of poet Diane Seuss-Brakeman) ""glances, romances, beauty and guilt, regret, remorse, rebates and rejuvenations."" Boomer Girls share a common culture, bound by their generation's political history, by pop icons like Barbie--that pedestaled Boomer Girl who's just turned forty--and by the music that's never stopped playing: Janis Joplin, Marvin Gaye, Jimi Hendrix, the Ronettes, Van Morrison, Patsy Cline, John Lennon. The Boomer poets in this feisty anthology speak with diverse voices and embody a wide range of experiences, yet their generation's universal images--the hula hoops, TV shows, finned automobiles, and other household gods of their youth--unite them in ways both hilarious and tender. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Pamela Gemin , Paula SergiPublisher: University of Iowa Press Imprint: University of Iowa Press Dimensions: Width: 14.30cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.333kg ISBN: 9780877456872ISBN 10: 0877456879 Pages: 242 Publication Date: 01 September 1999 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviews<p> This rich anthology tracks boomer girls from birth to, well, knowingness...Their poems are about loss, loneliness, violence, and love. The writers in Boomer Girls touch themes that all generations experience but this generation can express for all of us--in ways that quietly-bred Emily Dickinson, say, never could--what it is to be a girl baby, then adolescent, then woman growing up in America. --Susan Stamberg, NPR's All Things Considered. ''This rich anthology tracks boomer girls from birth to, well, knowingness.... Their poems are about loss, loneliness, violence, and love. The writers in Boomer Girls touch themes that all generations experience but this generation can express for all of us--in ways that quietly bred Emily Dickinson, say, never could--what it is to be a girl baby, then adolescent, then woman growing up in America.'' This rich anthology tracks boomer girls from birth to, well, knowingness...Their poems are about loss, loneliness, violence, and love. The writers in Boomer Girls touch themes that all generations experience but this generation can express for all of us--in ways that quietly-bred Emily Dickinson, say, never could--what it is to be a girl baby, then adolescent, then woman growing up in America. --Susan Stamberg, NPR's All Things Considered. This rich anthology tracks boomer girls from birth to, well, knowingness Their poems are about loss, loneliness, violence, and love. The writers in Boomer Girls touch themes that all generations experience but this generation can express for all of us in ways that quietly-bred Emily Dickinson, say, never could what it is to be a girl baby, then adolescent, then woman growing up in America. Susan Stamberg, NPR's All Things Considered. This rich anthology tracks boomer girls from birth to, well, knowingness...Their poems are about loss, loneliness, violence, and love. The writers in Boomer Girls touch themes that all generations experience but this generation can express for all of us--in ways that quietly-bred Emily Dickinson, say, never could--what it is to be a girl baby, then adolescent, then woman growing up in America. --Susan Stamberg, NPR's All Things Considered. ''This rich anthology tracks boomer girls from birth to, well, knowingness.... Their poems are about loss, loneliness, violence, and love. The writers in Boomer Girls touch themes that all generations experience but this generation can express for all of us--in ways that quietly bred Emily Dickinson, say, never could--what it is to be a girl baby, then adolescent, then woman growing up in America.'' Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |