The empty nest 31 parents tell the truth about relationships, love, and freedom after the kids fly the coop

Book - 2007

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306.874/Empty
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 306.874/Empty Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Voice, Hyperion 2007.
Language
English
Other Authors
Karen Stabiner (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
302 p.
ISBN
9781401302573
  • Proof of Love
  • Flown Away, Left Behind
  • Regime Change
  • Careful What You Wish For
  • Always Close
  • The Rules of the Road
  • The Last Summer
  • My Cart
  • Time Traveler
  • The Science of Ghost Hunting
  • Who Knows Where the Time Goes
  • Migrations
  • Without a Net
  • 3GRLMOM
  • The Dog Waiting by the Door
  • In Twos
  • A Rotten Enough Parent
  • Epiphanies of the Empty Nest
  • A Mile Ain't What It Used to Be
  • Leaving the Island
  • Good-bye to the Sunset Man
  • The Shuffle
  • Legacies
  • Keeping Him Safe
  • The Shoes on the Stairs
  • Afterwards
  • Conversations
  • Trading a Business Suit for Blue Jeans
  • The Godfather
  • Juggling Lite
  • The Old Blue House and the New Blue House
  • Contributors
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This collection, edited by Stabiner (My Girl: Adventures with a Teen in Training), includes essays by such well-known authors as Anna Quindlen, Ellen Goodman and Susan Shreve, as well as lesser knowns. Mothers write the bulk of the stories, though a handful of dads, such as Charles McGrath, help to balance the perspective. Quindlen, always a reliable sage, writes that the empty nest is emptier than ever before by virtue of the fact that so many mothers of her generation threw themselves so wholeheartedly into the role. Alongside the recurring motif of parents sighing forlornly at the threshold of their children's empty rooms, there is also a place for humor ("You lose a child, you gain a sex life," writes Letty Cottin Pogrebin in the essay "Epiphanies of the Empty Nest") as well as a sense of optimism and rebirth ("I felt myself standing a little taller, like a plant reaching up toward the sun," observes Marian Sandmaier). While many of these essays address kids leaving for college, one mother laments a son who died of a heart ailment and another a boy who has set off for Iraq. This varied and compassionate collection may not mitigate the empty nesters' pain, but it should make them feel that they're in good company as they navigate this parental rite of passage. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved