Cover Image: The Book of Old Ladies

The Book of Old Ladies

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Member Reviews

I received an ARC from NetGalley, the author, and publisher for an honest review. The book starts out with, "I have always read fiction to find models for how to live, how to be. I am not alone; we search for ourselves in story, often seeing our lives in fictional plots and imagining out potential future through lenses of fictional lives.
The author does know because that is exactly why I wanted to read the book. The book was a different type of writing that I was used to but I was amazed at how often I got a glimpse of me in the stories. 2020 is a different kind of year and this book is a different kind of book but I am learning so much from both. As I was reading the book, I kept thinking this is one of those books I need to save because I think it is also one of those books that you see what you need to see now but as my journey continues and I reread this book, I will see things I didn't see when I read it this time.

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This was a great collection of stories about women of old age. The ability to see ourselves via her writing shows how gifted of an author Ms. Saxton is. This was a great read!

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A really interesting read a look at women of a certain age their thoughts life experience.I really enjoyed reading this book and will be recommending to friends who I know will enjoy it.# netgalley#shewritespress

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It can often feel like youth has a monopoly on starring roles in fiction, so this is a refreshing look at women who are older and wiser in the realm of fiction. Nicely researched and well-written, The Book of Old Ladies proves that everyone should get the chance to star in their own story.

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On Goodreads:
I received an ARC of this book through Net Galley. Thank you so much to both Net Galley and the Author Ruth Saxton for giving me the opportunity of discovering such a wonderful book. The author discusses 31 books about aging women protagonists. Her summaries of each were wonderful. I particularly enjoyed her discussions detailing how the women were portrayed and the limitations of them we were given. I felt like this was a book club which actually opened my eyes to more of the story than was written. I had never approached books from this view. Even the books I had read that the author reviewed were 'new' to me through her eyes. I feel that life is all about learning and this book asks me to seek more from my reading. I have added most of these books to my TBR and look forward to spending more time with each of these characters. Thank you for this book which explains more fully the lives of aging women.

On my FB page BOOKIES!:
BOOKIES! I just read such an interesting book. It is an advanced readers copy from Net Galley. It will be out in September. This is a book written by a female professor about how older women are portrayed as main characters in fiction from the last 50 years. She took 31 books and divided them up into 5 categories then summarized and compared them. I now have about 25 books added to my TBR pile. She talks about the stereotypes of older protagonists, like one brief romance years ago was the focus on her whole life (NOT!). But how many books have we read like that? Or how women could have families and jobs but had to give up their creative aspirations because of society's limitations. The author states her purpose for writing this book was to "...make you want to pick (these books) up and begin your own search for models of aging that defy the restrictive plots that do not represent women's true possibilities."

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