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Hardcover A Girl's Life: Horses, Boys, Weddings, & Luck Book

ISBN: 0807126853

ISBN13: 9780807126851

A Girl's Life: Horses, Boys, Weddings, & Luck

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

In pleasant contrast to the recent flood of haunted childhood memoirs, A Girl's Life is about growing up in a functional family, about nurture, serenity, wonderment, and the stabilizing contributions an unencumbered heart makes in the life of an observant child. Marianne Gingher makes the events of a "normal" girlhood not only engaging but distinctly illuminating and explores rites of passage that are as persuasive in shaping an artist's sensibilities as are privations.

A meditation on the comforts of homeplace and family, A Girl's Life celebrates the last era in America, the 1950s and 1960s, when it was still possible to enjoy a cynicism-free girlhood--when "it was still safe for children to take gifts from strangers and not yet unwise for them to leave the doors of their hearts unlocked." As Eudora Welty wrote in her autobiographical memoir One Writer's Beginnings, "A sheltered life can be a daring life as well. For all serious daring starts from within." The seventeen personal narratives collected here corroborate Welty's conviction.

Arranged in a loose chronology, the tales document a southern white girl's middle-class initiation into the adult world. The first section, "Sanctuary," recalls Gingher's earliest impressions of family dynamics and shelter, a child's yearnings and resourcefulness. "Truths and Grit," the second section, deals with the tempering of bliss, a young girl's first encounters with corruption and mortality. In the final group of essays, "Metaphors and Pies," Gingher explores the contributions her recollections of childhood make in her ongoing trials as a parent and a writer. That her own childhood still permeates and inspires her present life is perhaps its greatest legacy.

Did the way Marianne Gingher grow up compel her toward the writing life? Certainly the impact of that distant time, specific people and events, sensory-steeped moments, and the privilege of being allowed to dream as well as do enriched and fostered the writer's imagination. By turns funny, provocative, jubilant, and tender, A Girl's Life is perhaps most notable for both exalting and justifying the place of happiness in a writer's development.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Nice Memoir about Not just a Writer but a Woman Growing UP

Even before I realized that Marianne Gingher was from NC (my home state) I was a fan of "Bobby Rex's Greatest Hit." As a fan, and a writer, I really wanted to read her memoir. The title of this memoir is apt. Gingher proceeds to describe the life that, I think, most of the world lives--simple but not at all unimportant. This memoir takes us through her chldhood with horses, boys and even weddings she was in as a child and her own. Gingher's style is easy to read but yet filled with wonderful turns of phrase. Even if you aren't a writer, I think you will find this memoir interesting and possibly uplifting. I like to collect quotes but I had a hard time narrowing down which one I wanted to use. I finally decided on this from page 73, "Lack of proof gives one creative latitude. But a writer remembers the past with a memory that is stored with the self-serving loopholes of revision."

Don't overlook this amazing memior

This charming account of life warmed me, mostly because Gingher writes it in the moment. She is able to capture the untainted memories, the way she first experienced them, as if she keeps them wrapped in paper in a cedar chest. She allows us to see her shift as she becomes older, lay a more seasoned view on her experiences as her life progresses, and I love how her earliest tales are told as she probably told them back then. I found her accounts believable and beyond intersting, her details startlingly fresh, all tinged with humor. A happy childhood is not an unfulfilling one - it is filled with risks, heartbreak, and danger because this is the nature of all human life. Gingher has chronicled such a life and does so with such style that I marveled as much at her description and control as I did the stories themselves. This is a treasure.
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