The Girls and Me: Fictional Snapshots

Fiction & Literature, Contemporary Women
Cover of the book The Girls and Me: Fictional Snapshots by Elizabeth Morris, Elizabeth Morris
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Author: Elizabeth Morris ISBN: 9781310464461
Publisher: Elizabeth Morris Publication: January 24, 2016
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Elizabeth Morris
ISBN: 9781310464461
Publisher: Elizabeth Morris
Publication: January 24, 2016
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

An array of mid-20th Century women parade through the narrator’s life, who tells their partial early life stories as she remembers them, weaving her own story into the fabric of the whole.
Thus “Margaret Anne” remembers “old” friends, most of them from the fifties, sixties and seventies, whose lives at one time intersected with hers, then largely disappear to be replaced by others.
There are names like, Allison, Zelda, Ellen and Christina, all of whom reflect an innocence of a long-gone way of life. The book is semi-autobiographical, reflecting another era, the characters fading away like “old soldiers.” Almost all of them eventually have children who will live much different lives, in a sense, leaving their parents “in the dust” of a once gentle time that will never come again.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

An array of mid-20th Century women parade through the narrator’s life, who tells their partial early life stories as she remembers them, weaving her own story into the fabric of the whole.
Thus “Margaret Anne” remembers “old” friends, most of them from the fifties, sixties and seventies, whose lives at one time intersected with hers, then largely disappear to be replaced by others.
There are names like, Allison, Zelda, Ellen and Christina, all of whom reflect an innocence of a long-gone way of life. The book is semi-autobiographical, reflecting another era, the characters fading away like “old soldiers.” Almost all of them eventually have children who will live much different lives, in a sense, leaving their parents “in the dust” of a once gentle time that will never come again.

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