The Woman Who Never Cooked

Nonfiction, Entertainment, Drama, Anthologies
Cover of the book The Woman Who Never Cooked by Mary L. Tabor, Outer Banks Publishing Group
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Author: Mary L. Tabor ISBN: 9781301588008
Publisher: Outer Banks Publishing Group Publication: March 6, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Mary L. Tabor
ISBN: 9781301588008
Publisher: Outer Banks Publishing Group
Publication: March 6, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

SECOND EDITION - The American adult woman is featured in this debut collection of stories about love, adultery, marriage, passion, death, and family. There is a subtle humor here, and an innate wisdom about everyday life as women find solace in cooking, work, and chores. Tabor reveals the thoughts of her working professional women who stream into Washington, D.C., from the outer suburbs, the men they date or marry, and the attractive if harried commuters they meet. One woman fantasizes about the burglar who escaped with her deceased mother's jewelry. In another story, the protagonist uncovers her husband's secret: his pocket mirror and concealer do not belong, as she had feared, to a mistress but rather are items he uses to hide his growing bald spot. Revealed here are the hidden layers of lives that seem predictable but never are. Reading Tabor's wry tales, one has the sense of entering the private lives of the women you see everyday on your way to work. Emily Cook
Copyright American Library Association. All rights reserved

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

SECOND EDITION - The American adult woman is featured in this debut collection of stories about love, adultery, marriage, passion, death, and family. There is a subtle humor here, and an innate wisdom about everyday life as women find solace in cooking, work, and chores. Tabor reveals the thoughts of her working professional women who stream into Washington, D.C., from the outer suburbs, the men they date or marry, and the attractive if harried commuters they meet. One woman fantasizes about the burglar who escaped with her deceased mother's jewelry. In another story, the protagonist uncovers her husband's secret: his pocket mirror and concealer do not belong, as she had feared, to a mistress but rather are items he uses to hide his growing bald spot. Revealed here are the hidden layers of lives that seem predictable but never are. Reading Tabor's wry tales, one has the sense of entering the private lives of the women you see everyday on your way to work. Emily Cook
Copyright American Library Association. All rights reserved

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