The Wednesday Sisters
Meg Waite Clayton, . . Ballantine, $25 (288pp) ISBN 978-0-345-50282-7
In her light second novel, Clayton chronicles a group of mothers who convene in a Palo Alto park and share their changing lives as the late 1960s counterculture blossoms around them. Linda is a runner who tracks women's progress at the Olympics. Brett has one eye on the moon, where men are living out her astronaut dreams. Southern belle Kath isn't convinced she has dreams outside the confines of her marriage (but she's open to persuasion), while quiet Ally only hopes for what the other women already have: a child. Frankie, a Chicago transplant who has followed her computer genius husband to a nascent Silicon Valley, is the story's narrator and the ladies' ringleader, inspiring them all to follow her dream of becoming a writer. They write in moments snatched from their household chores and share their stories in the park. Though the narration and story lines are so syrupy they verge on hokey, Clayton ably conjures the era's details and captures the women's changing roles in a world that expects little of them.
Reviewed on: 03/03/2008
Genre: Fiction
Compact Disc - 978-1-4361-0529-3
Downloadable Audio - 978-1-4561-0484-9
Hardcover - 375 pages - 978-1-60285-224-2
Paperback - 336 pages - 978-0-345-50283-4