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Description
2020 IPPY GOLD AWARD WINNER Memoir
A not-so-nice Jewish girl, expelled from Yale Drama during the Vietnam protests, abandons her acting dream to follow the man she loves to an off-the-grid commune in Oregon.
At 23, Carol Schlanger was an insecure upper middle class radical. Her parents spoiled her and she expected the universe to follow. It didn't. After being expelled from Yale, losing a coveted Broadway lead, and seeing a suicide splatter at her feet, she left NYC for the Great Northwest, to live in nature with a man "who made everything beautiful with his hands." At that time she chose love and nature, over art and career ... until she didn't. Carol Schlanger put "hidden" cash down on an abandoned homestead--160 acres. The commune followed--all 13 jammed tight into a broken-down cabin with no phone, no electricity, and no running water. They were dependent on each other for every human need and survival. But then freeloading and free love threatened the hard-won utopia. After struggling through infidelity, rape, and childbirth, all except the father of her child left when Carol refused to share land ownership. When, as a lone wilderness "wife," she accidentally set their house on fire, she realized she couldn't survive in isolation. Strapping her toddler into a battered old Chevy, she headed to Los Angeles to reclaim her life as a mother, her power as an artist, and her responsibility as an adult. This time her Texan followed her. This is both their love story, and a love story for an explosive, mind-altering era.
Product Details
Publisher | Wyatt-MacKenzie Publishing |
Publish Date | July 09, 2019 |
Pages | 292 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781948018463 |
Dimensions | 9.0 X 6.0 X 0.7 inches | 0.9 pounds |
Reviews
"Carol can't say a sentence--she can't write a sentence--without making you laugh."
-- Henry Winkler, Emmy-award winning actor, director, producer and bestselling author
"I'm sitting at my kitchen counter having lunch and I just opened your book to where you first meet Clint and then I just couldn't stop. I'm up to chapter five. You are such a good writer, Carol. And I've laughed out loud a bunch. Reading about Clint makes me feel horny and jealous."
-- Jane Fonda, actor and activist
"I wish I could write as elegantly as Carol Schlanger. I wish I was as brilliantly funny as Carol Schlanger. I wish I had joined her commune in the 70s and lived her outrageous, back-to-the-land life. But since I wasn't and didn't, reading her riveting, gut-busting and brave work is the next best thing. Strip down, light-up and catch her as fast as you can!"
-- Arlene Sarner, award-winning screenwriter (PEGGY SUE GOT MARRIED, BLUE SKY), playwright and author
"A miracle! Both a poignant confessional and darkly comic Roman à clef, about a life led on such different planes that it is astounding there was ever any intersection. The story of how a young, deeply urban woman learns to live off the grid in the Pacific Northwest, gutting fish, chopping wood, and making love like an accidental, Jewish she-wolf is sensational. I couldn't put it down."
-- Carl Gottlieb, award-winning screenwriter (JAWS), director and author
"Carol Schlanger's wild ride of a memoir gallops hilariously through the early seventies commune experience that all of us old hippies meant to have. She has the perfect voice of her generation. Honest, rebellious, sensual, politically astute, she's invited us into history to live and love through her. We dare not pass up the opportunity because being Carol is in itself an adventure."
-- Barbara Bottner, New York Times bestselling author
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