EBOOK

Hot Flashes

Barbara Raskin
4
(1)
Pages
377
Year
2016
Language
English

About

New York Times Bestseller: This "landmark women's novel" about female friendship and women's lib is "something akin to Mary McCarthy's The Group" (People).

Diana Sargeant is a menopausal anthropology professor whose hot flashes often produce insights into life, love, and what it means to be a woman. Diana belongs to a generation of A-list females: well-educated jet-setters who overcame their fear of flying in the fifties, became leftist protestors in the sixties, and were glamorous seductresses on birth control in the seventies. But in the eighties, they're middle-aged matrons who are afraid of their own mortality and must come to terms with the fact that even though they obtained everything they desired, they're still unfulfilled. When Diana's close friend Sukie Amram suffers a fatal brain hemorrhage, the professor rushes to Washington, DC, to mourn and commemorate the woman she so loved. There, she reunites with her lifelong pals: flashy magazine writer Joanne Ireland and divorced English teacher Elaine Cantor. The three soon discover Sukie's journal, which details her battle with despair after her husband abandoned her for a younger lover. As they read through the details of Sukie's post divorce anguish, the friends revisit difficult moments in their own pasts and discover themselves anew. Called "a feminist version of The Big Chill" by the Washington Post, Hot Flashes is an irreverent, witty, and emotionally engaging novel about four intelligent, trailblazing women that provides a compelling, honest look at female fears and desire during the late twentieth century.

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Reviews

"As important as The Group and The Women's Room . . . A novel so entertaining you'll be annoyed to have it end . . . Every once in a while, a novelist comes along whose eye for detail is so precise that you wonder if she's read your private journal. Barbara Raskin is just such a writer."
Cosmopolitan
"Hot, flashy and wonderful! . . .Plenty of flashes here-of wit, humor, insight, anger . . . It builds to a conclusion that is powerful, moving and hopeful."
The Cincinnati Post
"Enchanting, entrancing, ennobling, all-encompassing."
West Coast Review of Books

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