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Eye of My Heart - by Barbara Graham (Paperback)

Eye of My Heart - by  Barbara Graham (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 12.49 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Twenty-five of today's top women writers offer honest and straightforward perspectives on the complex role that is grandmotherhood, in this collection of touching, funny, painful, and true stories.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><strong>"Finally, a look at grandmothering that is decidedly unsentimental. These clear-eyed essays offer humor and insight as they take on the multigenerational lives many of us now lead." -Cokie Roberts, author of <em>We Are Our Mothers' Daughters</em></strong></p><p>In this groundbreaking collection, twenty-seven smart, gutsy writers explode the clichés and tell the <em>real</em> stories about what it's like to be a grandmother in today's world. Among the contributors: </p><ul><li>Judith Viorst exposes the high-stakes competition for Most Adored Nana.</li><li>Anne Roiphe learns to keep her mouth shut and her opinions to herself.</li><li>Elizabeth Berg marvels at witnessing her child give birth to her child.</li><li>Judith Guest confesses her failed attempt to be the perfect grandmother.</li><li>Jill Nelson grapples with unforeseen mother-daughter tensions.</li><li>Ellen Gilchrist reveals how grandparenthood has eased her fear of death.</li><li>Beverly Donofrio makes amends for her shortcomings as a teenage mother.</li><li>Bharati Mukherjee transcends her Hindu upbringing to embrace her adopted Chinese granddaughters.</li><li>Mary Pipher deconstructs the role of grandmother in our changing world.</li></ul><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><p>With A New Epilogue by editor Barbara Graham</p><p>In this groundbreaking collection, twenty-seven smart, gutsy writers explode the clichés and tell the <em>real</em> stories about what it's like to be a grandmother in today's world. Among the contributors: </p><ul><li>Judith Viorst exposes the high-stakes competition for Most Adored Nana.</li><li>Anne Roiphe learns to keep her mouth shut and her opinions to herself.</li><li>Elizabeth Berg marvels at witnessing her child give birth to her child.</li><li>Judith Guest confesses her failed attempt to be the perfect grandmother.</li><li>Jill Nelson grapples with unforeseen mother-daughter tensions.</li><li>Ellen Gilchrist reveals how grandparenthood has eased her fear of death.</li><li>Beverly Donofrio makes amends for her shortcomings as a teenage mother.</li><li>Bharati Mukherjee transcends her Hindu upbringing to embrace her adopted Chinese granddaughters.</li><li>Mary Pipher deconstructs the role of grandmother in our changing world.</li></ul><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"Insightful and candid, sometimes painfully so. . . . Women who have achieved grandmotherly status will appreciate this engaging, honest volume of essays by 26 writers who articulate shared emotions about their grandchildren."--<em>Publishers Weekly</em><br><br>"As someone who was partly raised by my maternal grandparents and adored them, I always knew that grandmotherhood would be intense for me. But I didn't realize that it would be such a revelation. <em>Eye of My Heart</em> really does what its subtitle suggests--reveals the pleasures and perils of grandmotherhood."--<strong>Erica Jong, author of <em>Fear of Fifty</em></strong><br><br>"In illuminating, unsentimental essays, 27 writers offer up insights on the tricky art of grandmothering."--<strong><em>People</em></strong><br><br>"So many different perspectives and vantage points are woven seamlessly that no matter what their personal relationship to the word 'grandmother' is, readers will find much to make them laugh out loud--and also to break their hearts."--<strong><em>Christian Science Monitor</em></strong><br><br>"Spry and unsentimental. . . . Truth telling with dollops of love."--<strong><em>O magazine</em></strong><br><br>"These stories are so fresh and fundamental, wrenching and joyful, that one is left feeling that the subject has never been cracked open before."--<strong>Harriet Lerner, author of <em>The Dance of Anger</em></strong><br>

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