Private Life (Paperback)

Private Life By Jane Smiley Cover Image

Private Life (Paperback)

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NATIONAL BESTSELLER • From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of A Thousand Acres—and “one of her generation’s most eloquent chroniclers of ordinary familial love” (The New York Times)comes a “masterly…compelling depiction of a singular woman,” (The New Yorker), from her childhood in post–Civil War Missouri to California in the throes of World War II. 

Here is the powerful, deeply affecting story of one Margaret Mayfield. When Margaret marries Captain Andrew Jackson Jefferson Early at the age of twenty-seven, she narrowly avoids condemning herself to life as an old maid. Instead, knowing little about marriage and even less about her husband, she moves with Andrew to his naval base in California. Margaret stands by Andrew during tragedies both historical and personal, but as World War II approaches and the secrets of her husband’s scientific and academic past begin to surface, she is forced to reconsider the life she had so carefully constructed. 
 
A riveting and nuanced novel of marriage and family, Private Life reveals the mysteries of intimacy and the anonymity that endures even in lives lived side by side.
JANE SMILEY is the author of numerous novels, including A Thousand Acres, which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, and most recently, Golden Age, the concluding volume of The Last Hundred Years trilogy. She is also the author of five works of nonfiction and a series of books for young adults. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, she has also received the PEN Center USA Lifetime Achievement Award for Literature. She lives in Northern California.
Product Details ISBN: 9781400033195
ISBN-10: 1400033195
Publisher: Anchor
Publication Date: June 14th, 2011
Pages: 416
Language: English
“Masterly.... [A] precise, compelling depiction of a singular woman.” —The New Yorker

“Extraordinarily powerful.... It’s not often that a work as exceptional as this comes along in contemporary American letters.” —The Washington Post

“Smiley’s best novel yet.... [A] heartbreaking, bitter, and gorgeous story.” —The Atlantic Monthly
 
“Remarkable.... With its quietly accruing power, [Private Life is] the kind of book that puts the lie to those who claim that great novelists produce their best work early and spend the rest of their lives gilding the lily.” —Chicago Tribune

“Has a Jamesian twist of the unforeseen, but it’s achieved with a sureness of hand that’s all [Smiley’s] own.” —The New York Times Book Review

“Smiley’s eye is keen, and the book’s historical pageant is often mesmerizing and often elegantly composed.... A quiet tragedy.” —The Seattle Times

Private Life, perhaps Jane Smiley’s best novel since her Pulitzer Prize-winning A Thousand Acres, is so firmly anchored in its historical setting that the past comes to seem like the reader’s present.” —The Oregonian

“Smiley tells her story precisely.... Private Life has a stunning specificity of detail.... Husband and wife are three-dimensional, alive and memorable in the way characters in fiction and people in biographies so rarely are.” —The Miami Herald

“Brilliant.... A story of immense originality and insight.... It is served well by the fascinating era in which it is set, and most of all by Smiley’s wit and erudition.” —The Philadelphia Inquirer

“A book whose enormous power sneaks up on you.... Unlike so many contemporary novels, which start out sure-footed but eventually lose focus, this novel keeps getting better.” —The Newark Star Ledger

“Powerful.... Smiley is a wonderful writer.... [She] creates a convincing, nuanced portrait of a woman’s life when women had few options.” —San Diego Union-Tribune
 
“Brilliant.... Private Life is a powerful, challenging and, ultimately, fierce work of fiction, a masterpiece of a novel that stands with the best of Smiley’s work.” —The Guardian (UK)
 
“A fine portrait.... [Private Life] should only enhance Smiley’s reputation as one of the most innovative and accomplished writers currently at work.” —The Times Literary Supplement (London)
 
“A chilling tale, quietly absorbing.” —Bloomberg
 
“Richly detailed.... I read parts of Smiley’s novel to my mother and, afterward, we found ourselves wondering about our dead female relatives..... They lived, they sorrowed; maybe now we understand them a little better than before.” —Susan Swan, The Globe and Mail (Toronto)