The first I heard of that story was in the novel “Emmeline” by Judith Rossner, published in 1980. A year later, his family visited the couple and discovered that he had married his own mother. When she was 62, she married again, this time to a younger man from Massachusetts who had come north to Fayette to work on the roads. Years later, she married a man and had another son, both of whom disappeared, probably heading west. She did and said nothing about the child. She hid this by telling her family she was sick and would return to Fayette when recovered. However, she was seduced by her boss and bore a son, whom she gave up for immediate adoption. She saved money and sent some home to her family, who needed it badly. She was only 14 and one of hundreds of others like her from rural northern New England. With the permission of her family, Emmeline Bachelder, born in Fayette, Maine, around 1817, went to Lowell, Mass., as a “mill girl” to work in the newly constructed textile mills there along the Merrimac River. It’s a most unlikely story, but it may have happened. Were events in Emmeline’s life a matter of fact or fiction?
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It is cheekily old fashioned and postmodern at the same time. Sagging Meniscus publishes unconventional literature, and this fits in with their mystique.Īt bottom, amid the multifarious themes tackled in this novel, a few stand-outs are: Domestic violence, tenderness, and family trial. His writing is constantly surprising, and the fecundity of his language deserves all the accolades. Simple concepts are infused with elaborate invention, complex scenarios are spun out for the sheer novelty of the method, archly described by Señor Stitch. Stitch’s novel, however, turns out, by and by, to be much more. It is a distinct and satisfying form of entertainment. This original work begins as a comedy of sophisticated, staged moments, which appear to be ill-planned mishaps misfiring with intriguing results. The result is a provocative read that provides the tools necessary to take the most of your twenties, and shows us how work, relationships, personality, identity and even the brain can change more during this decade than at any other time in adulthood-if we use the time well. In The Defining Decade, Meg Jay argues that twentysomethings have been caught in a swirl of hype and misinformation, much of which has trivialized the most transformative time of our lives.ĭrawing from more than two decades of work with thousands of clients and students, Jay weaves the latest science of the twentysomething years with behind-closed-doors stories from twentysomethings themselves. Some say they are an extended adolescence. Our "thirty-is-the-new-twenty" culture tells us the twentysomething years don't matter. Revised and reissued for a new generation, let it change how you think about you and yours. The Defining Decade has changed the way millions of twentysomethings think about their twenties-and themselves. The Defining Decade: Why Your Twenties Matter-And How to Make the Most of Them Now – BookaliciousMY |