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Loading... Trip of a Lifetimeby Liz Byrski
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When Heather Delaney is injured in a shocking act of violence, her life is thrown off course. Struggling to return to work, she is haunted by the incident. Was it random or personal? Will they try again? And Heather is not the only one who is rocked by the attack. Her brother, Adam, and his second wife, Jill, already juggling the demands of work and pre-teen children find their marriage is straining at the seams. Adam disappears into his music while Jill attempts to keep all the balls in the air. Shaun, Heather's offsider, young, loyal and ambitious, questions his relationship: Diane, an office volunteer, can't stop the bitterness pouring out after a mid-life divorce; and Heather's aunt, Barbara, is about to have her peaceful rural retirement disrupted by conflicting loyalties. Then along comes Heather's old flame, Ellis. Romantic, flamboyant, determined to recapture the past and take control of the future, he seems to have all the answers. But can it really be that easy? No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.3Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction 1558-1625LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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This is the fourth of a series by West Australian university professor, Liz Byrski, that tackle issues of personal self-discovery, fulfilment, and happiness with older women as protagonists and as readers. In this book, the heroine is at the centre of a crime: she has political power, gets shot and enjoys great sex. Well, two out of three is certainly not too shoddy for an older woman in contemporary popular fiction these days.
Byrski is carving our a niche writing for women in their fifties, who seem to be invisible elsewhere in literature. There are lots of books focusing on women up to their 40s, but once they hit 50, they seem to cease to exist - or to be portrayed as as nosey old neighbours or bossy mother-in-laws. And they certainly aren’t having sex.
Byrski is hell-bent on showing that midlife is no longer a time when women step off a cliff and disappear. I fall into that demographic - and her books have an enormous resonance for me. Women like me read them to see ourselves reflected back; men read them to understand; one woman read a Byrski book, and apparently packed her bags and took off, ending up doing voluntary work in Peru. I can understand that. ( )