The Death of Fred Astaire
Author | : Leslie Lawrence |
Publisher | : SUNY Press |
Total Pages | : 293 |
Release | : 2016-03-01 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1438461046 |
When, in the late eighties, the author chooses to raise a child with her lesbian partner, she embraces a life outside the linesone full of curious adventures as well as the usual catastrophes and everyday pleasures. As a child of the sixties, Leslie Lawrence knew she didnt want to duplicate her parents lives, yet she never imagined shed stray so far outside the lines of theirand her ownexpectations. The Death of Fred Astaire opens with the story, both wrenching and funny, of how Lawrence says her goodbyes to the iconic images shes held since her youth; she then proceeds to bear a child and raise him with her lesbian partner. Some essays in this debut collection reflect on legacies Lawrence inherited from her Jewish family and culture. In others, she searches gamely for a rich, authentic lifea voice, a vocation, a community, even a god she can call her own. Always a seeker, an adventurer resisting fear, Lawrence, a city girl, creates a summer home in the back woods of the Live Free or Die state. She attempts the flying trapeze and takes part in a cross-dressing workshop. Traveling alone to Morocco, she assists a veterinarian tending to an ailing donkey. Teaching in a vocational high school in Boston, she questions her methods and assumptions about race and class. With rare honesty, she confronts the complexities of motherhood, of caring for her ill partner, and of widowhood. In Wonderlust, the collections most ambitious piece, she explores the role of beauty and creativity in our spiritual lives, revealing how lifelong learning in dance, music, and the visual arts can make us all more alive even as we age. Ranging widely in length, subject, and style, these personal essays place Lawrence among todays most vital writers of creative nonfiction. Her warmth and wisdom, her distinctive blend of humor and pathos, her reverence for what sustains usfood and family, community and beautyall make this a book youll want to share with those you love. Leslie Lawrences essays are sympathetic and patiently observed; she ably demonstrates that hard choices call for careful and humane decisions. John Irving The Death of Fred Astaire assembles a realistic and venturesome portrait of the authoras writer, teacher, partner, mother, grieving partner, perennial seekerwhile capturing the complicated texture of the post-1960s decades of American life. Lawrences reach is wide, her narrative skills highly honed, and her tone is resonant with a sense of truth being told. Sven Birkerts, author of Changing the Subject: Art and Attention in the Internet Age The Death of Fred Astaire is warm, wry, and rich in detail. A lovely read! Kate Clinton, comedian In this stirring collection, Lawrence boldly plumbs her many livesas lesbian mother, writer, widow, teacher, student, border-crosser each is rich beyond description. The Death of Fred Astaire is a marvelous book. Read it and rejoice through your tears! Hilda Raz, coauthor of What Becomes You This lively and eclectic collection of personal essays will appeal to a wide range of readers, educating some about an era of American cultural history and for others providing material for an associational romp through their own memories. Additionally, The Death of Fred Astaire will provide useful material for courses in education, nonfiction writing, cultural studies, and womens studies. Pamela Annas, University of Massachusetts Boston The Death of Fred Astaire is a smart, thought-provoking collection. Leslie Lawrence is at once a wise, companionable guide, as well as an empathetic narrator who points out and identifies with our collective yearnings and desires, our foibles and idiosyncrasieswhich are, after all, the central human qualities that link each of us to one another. Michael Steinberg, author of Still Pitching: A Memoir