
Kate F. (
kateford) wrote on 9/24/2008...
9 member(s) found this review helpful.
I must be the only reviewer who found this book absolutely irritating. The thought behind it -- excellent. I was actually jealous at the writer's ability to make a decision to take a year away from her marriage for reflection, and that she had the resources to do so. I relished the opportunity to curl up with her for a year, feeling sad, or happy, joyous or disappointed, as she wrote about her experience.
Instead, I found my forcefully slamming the book down at times, and at other times, heaving deep sighs of irritation and annoyance. I thought Joan was a whiner who didn't appreciate the abundance of riches she had available to her, to even think about this experiement, let alone carry it out.
Poor me, my marriage has grown stagnant. My children are grown. I'm lonely. I'm overweight. Join the club, sister. But, guess where you and most of your readers part company? Many of us are still slaving away at the 9-5 jobs which put food on the table and pay the rent or mortgage. We don't have options. We don't have Cape Cod getaway houses, multiple vehicles, royalty checks arriving, a savings account we can empty to make the leap, and a year of free time to write about our disappointments.
I don't begrudge her what she had. I just wish she would have had more tact, class and dignity not to write from a place where she felt she had to constantly lament her life, when she had more abundance -- an embarassment of riches, really -- in that little cottage and the option to retreat to it, than legions of sad and lonely married women have.
I also have to hand it her to husband, estranged during this time, who took a few steps to make her grow up and stop whining. For instance, her cottage belonged to her family before she married and it came down through "her side of the family", not his. Long after she'd seperated from her husband and moved to her cottage, and he'd moved to another state to start over a new career as well, the cottage needed a major repair. What did she do? Called him for financial help. What--?! He pointed out, and I think fairly so, that this was her house, her problem. He had bills, two payments to make (his new house, the old house), and was struggling to make ends meet as well. It was her decision to take a year off and create this financially precarious decision, and she can't have it both ways -- the independence of living alone, and the expectation that her estranged husband would fix her house for her.
She then wrung her hands and lamented about what she had to do --- gasp --- GET A JOB to pay for the repairs. Welcome to our world, Joan, the world populated by single, divorced women everywhere -- and with small children, working two jobs to make ends meet.
This is example of her whining that just drove me crazy.
I also felt she used too much poetic rambling. She uses 10 words when she could use 5 and there was just such a sense of "Look at me, I'm a writer. Watch me write about a rainstorm and make it sound as if I'm watching it in techicolor."
I appreciate nature and all its glory. The best way to cook fresh ingredients is to let them shine through with simple recipes. Ditto nature and her beautiful displays. You don't need to ramp up the poetry to help describe Mother Nature's beauty. We GET it.
I still envy her ability to take herself away to reflect. but good gosh, she was so annoying.

Judy H. (
winter) wrote on 2/16/2008...
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
An absolutely wonderful book about a woman's adventure and finding solace in a world after a "failed" marriage. She finds herself and what she really wants out of her life by spending time alone. A book every woman should read, married or not. Very insightful about what we all need to learn to love ourselves.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
One of the best books I've ever read. Written like a finely woven story with such personality and insight, perfectly descriptive and refreshingly candid, with each chapter as poetic and glistening from the sea. I found myself lost in this book and transported to the seacoast, living and experiencing the life along the Atlantic, relaxing in the moment.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Outstanding. Recommended.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
I got to the end of this book and started rereading it again! There are so many wonderful little nuggets of truths and wisdom in this book... Joan Anderson writes honestly and unabashedly about her transformation and it's ups and downs. This book is not just for women who want to transform, but for all women in general in my opinion. Some excellent quotes to carry with you also.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
This is a story of how one woman, Joan Anderson, took a year off from her life as wife and mother to nurture and rediscover her potential. A YEAR BY THE SEA is a record of her experiences. Joan shares with the reader the steps she took to "revitalize" herself. This reads like "an intimate conversation with a close friend." An inspiring story and a quick read!

Lorelie L. (
artgal36) wrote on 3/12/2007...
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
"I'm beginning to think that real growing only begins after we've done the adult things we're supposed to do," confides Anderson, a journalist and author of children's books (Twins on Toes, etc.). She came to this conclusion after a year living alone in a cottage on Cape Cod. Feeling that her marriage had stagnated by the time her two sons were grown, Anderson surprised and distressed her husband by refusing to move out-of-state with him when he accepted a new job. In this accessible memoir, she shares the joy and self-knowledge she found during her time of semi-isolation. In order to supplement the income from her royalty checks, she found a job in the local fish market and began making new friends who sustained her. After her hot water heater broke down and her husband refused to help, she earned the additional money for the repair by digging and selling clams. Through vivid and meticulous observations about the natural world, Anderson makes clear her strong affinity for the ocean, with its changing tides, subtle colors and burgeoning life. A Memorial Day reunion brought Anderson and her husband closer; shortly thereafter she embraced his plan to retire and live with her in the cottage. Anderson has recently begun a "Weekend by the Sea" program for women who need time to reflect.