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The wednesday Sisters
The wednesday Sisters
Author: Meg Waite Clayton
Advanced Reader's Edition
ISBN: 137962
Pages: 284
Rating:
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 1

4.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Ballentine
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 2
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed The wednesday Sisters on + 37 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
It is a rare thing to read chick lit with an explicitly feminist message, but that's precisely what one gets from Meg Waite Clayton's The Wednesday Sisters. The novel tells the story of five women, all young wives and mothers, who become friends in suburban San Francisco in the late-1960s. All five have aspirations and dreams, which for many of them focus on writing. Thus, the five friends form a writers' group, and the novel tells the story of their efforts to support one another in meeting their goals within the confines of late-1960s expectations of young women. In this Clayton has created a good and engaging story, one with developed characters and which easily retains the reader's interest and sympathy.

One of the larger goals of this novel is clearly to explore women's lives in a time of tremendous change and upheval. The five women are clearly placed in time-- they watch the moon landing, and they attend an anti-war rally. Where the book was most interesting for me was in its treatment of second wave feminism, looking at how the growing movement shaped the lives of these five women. The book opens in 1967, before the myriad transformative events that will shake the world in 1968. What strikes the reader, and where Clayton does an especially good job, is in showing how white, suburban America in 1967 looked far more like the 1950s than what most of us associate with the 1960s (tie-dye, drugs, bra burning, and the like). But the changes do begin to happen, and the Wednesday sisters do not remain untouched. The book makes clear that the pace of the changes with which we credit the 1960s was sometimes slow, and that for many people, ideas had to change before the realities of their daily lives did. Most importantly, this books highlights some of the limits of feminism (and the other radical changes of the late-1960s). My one sifnificant criticism is that I didn't care for the way in which the story was told in retrospect with Frankie, the narrator, offering 21st century commentary on things she thought and did in the 1960s, offering side notes like "Of course we thought differently then." Just letting the characters be and exist in the 1960s would give them more complexity, and also highlight the limits of change. These women have their flaws. They have racist ideas. They have strong ideas about how families should be structured and the duties of husbands and wives. I'd prefer to just watch these things exist, unfold, and see how they changed, rather than getting presentist commentary.

Overall, though, I enjoyed this book. It's a great summer read, particularly for the daughters of these 1960s women who are now young mothers, wives, writers, and businesswomen.
cgarliepp avatar reviewed The wednesday Sisters on
Helpful Score: 3
Loved this book about the friendships between five young stay-at-home Moms in the 70's who meet in a park in Palo Alto, CA, while watching their kids play. They encourage each other to write and meet once a week at the park to read and critique each other's work. The story evolves around their individual lives, their friendships, and their writing. Read it, you'll like it!
kdurham2813 avatar reviewed The wednesday Sisters on + 753 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
A wonderful book filled completely of the relationships between women - the ups and downs. I absolutely fell in love with the group of women and was sort of jealous of their relationships. The men in their lives made an appearance, but the women held the centerpiece

Most of the time these books are told from each of their perspectives, but I was absolutely thrilled that it stayed from the perspective of the one character. I think that a sequel could be made and Clayton could take the group through their next phase from another person's voice.

Although, I don't tend to enjoy some of the more historical parts of books, I loved how it worked into their lives. They attended rallies and were affected by the history of the times.

I really enjoyed this book, it was so easy to get into and I was sad to say goodbye to these women. The women folk would definitely enjoy this book for the relationships and the events that affect their lives.
reviewed The wednesday Sisters on + 102 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I was so excited to get engrossed and become friends with this books characters...I was hugely disappointed for what could have been a wonderful book was a snoozer. I rarely do not finish a book, but this one I couldn't do. Books that begin bad, I hope to get better by the middle, this one didn't and I can not even stomach reading another boring page...
reviewed The wednesday Sisters on + 1436 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This novel follows friendship among five women who meet in a park in the late 1960s. It is a comforting read that helps one understand the importance of friends and their support when you need them. As the various women experience the bunps and leaps that life hands them throughout life they find friends help them through divorce, cancer, the loss of babies one after another and just life. It's the kind of quiet comforting read that we all need sometimes.
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emeraldfire avatar reviewed The wednesday Sisters on
During the late 1960s, five totally different women find themselves consistently meeting together every Wednesday at a park in Palo Alto, California. Initially defined by what their husbands do, these young homemakers and mothers are all fairly far removed from the Summer of Love. The 'Wednesday Sisters', as the ladies begin to call themselves - Frankie, Linda, Kath, Ally and Brett - actually don't seem to have much more in common with each other beyond a shared love of literature and the 'Miss America Pageant'.

Frankie is a timid transplant from Chicago; brutally honest and blunt Linda is a remarkable athlete; Kath is a Kentucky-bred debutante; quiet Ally has a secret that she has been keeping to herself; and quirky, ultra-intelligent Brett always makes sure to wear white gloves with her miniskirts. Yet somehow these five women find a way - over the course of nearly four decades - to redefine the meaning of the word family. By sharing their mutual admiration for the work of such authors as F. Scott Fitzgerald, George Eliot, Jane Austen, Daphne du Maurier, Sylvia Plath, and Charles Dickens and watching the 'Miss America Pageant' on television together each year; the ladies form an extraordinarily strong and lasting bond that will sustain all of them through the years.

As the years roll on and their children grow older, the quintet forms a writers' circle to express their hopes and dreams through writing poetry, stories, and, eventually, books. Along the way, this talented sisterhood also experiences history in the making - Vietnam, the race to put a man on the moon, and a women's movement that challenges everything that they have ever thought about themselves. All the while, the ladies support each other through the various personal struggles that they experience in their own lives: the changes to each of them that come from infedelity, longing, illness, failure, and success. The Wednesday Sisters is a humorous and poignant novel; a literary feast for book lovers that earns a place among those popular works that honor the joyful, mysterious, unbreakable bonds between friends.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. In my opinion, the story was very well-written and wonderfully historically detailed; I found that this author worked the various historical events into the story in a realistic and completely believable way. While I appreciated the detailed historical context - and thoroughly enjoyed reading this book because of it - I must say that I actually loved reading the stories of the 'Wednesday Sisters' themselves; their own personal life stories, slightly more than the historical context. I would give this book a definite A+! and am eagerly awaiting the chance to read Ms. Clayton's sequel: The Wednesday Daughters.
jkzjs avatar reviewed The wednesday Sisters on + 67 more book reviews
This was an excellent book. The story was moving and I actually felt as if I knew the characters personally. I highly recogmend this book.
reviewed The wednesday Sisters on
I was never a big reader until I got into my mid-20's. It usually takes me a long time to read a book, even one that is enjoyable. I picked up The Wednesday Sisters late last week and am now finished with it, I couldn't put it down (and that's with having 2 boys under the age of 2). It was a definite page turner and you wanted to know what happened next to the sisters and their writing.


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