Autobiography of an Elderly Woman

Front Cover
Pushcart Press, 1995 - Biography & Autobiography - 192 pages
"A few years ago my partner in the book business came home from a wearying excursion to a barn in Southwest Harbor, a small town in downeast Maine. Her car was full of second-round choices from the collection she had bought, books she had rejected the first time. Among them was the book you have just read. To me, her aging friend, she said 'This looks like it might interest you.'" Thus begins Doris Grumbach's Afterword about her discovery of Autobiography of an Elderly Woman, a book long out of print in a trade edition and written by a mysterious author. The subject of this "autobiography" is the onset of old age. The author calls to us across the century in a voice that is utterly convincing and timeless. Speaking just after the turn of the century - the book was first published in 1911 - the elderly voice rejoices in grandchildren, complains of the constraints that one's children and society place on older people, muses on the approach of infirmity and death and celebrates the motto, "as soon as you feel too old to do a thing, do it." But there is mystery behind this voice. Doris Grumbach explains her solution to that mystery in her Afterword: "Now, what about this cultivated, authentic-sounding, feisty old lady who, it seems, sat down to write anonymously about her life? Who was she?..."

From inside the book

Contents

The Shadow of Age
1
My Mothers House
22
The Conventions of Age
34
Copyright

11 other sections not shown

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About the author (1995)

Doris Grumbach was an American author, literary critic, essayist, and professor. She was born in New York City, on July 12, 1918. She attended Washington Square College of New York University. She studied philosophy and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1939. In 1940, she received a Master of Arts degree in Medieval Literature from Cornell University. In 1943, she joined the U. S. Navy and became an officer in the WAVES. until 1945. Her teaching career included the College of Saint Rose, in Albany, New York; the Iowa Writer's Workshop at the University of Iowa; and American University in Washington, D. C. In 1972, she began working as a literary editor for The New Republic magazine. She wrote 7 novels, 6 memoirs, a biography, and a children's book. Her books included the novels, Chamber Music (1979), and The Book of Knowledge (1995). Her memoirs included Coming into the End Zone (1991), and The Pleasure of Their Company (2001). Beyond writing, she and her partner ran a bookstore, Wayward Books, in Maine, until 2009. Doris Grumbach died on November 4, 2022. in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania. She was 104.

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