"Bravo
to Faulkner Fox for tackling head-on the major issues facing
women today. Intellectually rigorous and emotionally honest, this
book
should be required reading. Faulkner Fox is a wonderful writer.
I found
Dispatches from a Not-So-Perfect Life
to be loving, disturbing, hilarious and deeply meaningful."
--Lee Smith, author of The Last Girls
"I've perused plenty of [parenting books], looking for help
in raising my own children, but I can't think of one book as entertaining
or refreshingly honest as Faulkner Fox's Dispatches
from a Not-So-Perfect Life."
--Naomi Rand, The Boston Globe
Click here to read the whole review
"Fox is a biting and honest writer."
--The Washington Post
"Fox's personal primer on balancing child care and career
is a laugh-out-loud take on everything from spousal spats over
housework to the damaging effects of sleep deprivation. In this
fiercely honest book, Fox answers the bewildering question that
all mothers ask themselves: 'Am I crazy, or is it everyone else?'"
--Working Mother Magazine, MUST
READ column
Dispatches from a Not-So-Perfect Life
Second Place Winner in ELLE
Magazine's Readers' Prize, December
2003
"A brave work by a woman who's a familiar type: educated,
married, a new mother, trying to understand where the life she
thought she was signing up for went and what to do with the life
she is leading. I felt as I read the book that I had lived exactly
what the author was living but had been too tired and overwhelmed
to put it into coherent thoughts."
--Liz White, for ELLE Magazine
Faulkner Fox is my new best friend...As a result of her journey
through new motherhood, she wrote this brilliant book about what
some of us feel, why we feel it, and how we can move past those
feelings. This book is about real life that for some reason people
are so afraid to talk about...Faulkner Fox has penned not only
a provocative, flawlessly written book, but an important one.
--girlfriendbooks.com
Click here to read the whole review
http://www.girlfriendbooks.com/
"...Fox's motherhood memoir is beautifully written with great
intelligence, humor and irreverence."
--Independent Weekly
Click here to read the whole review
http://www.indyweek.com/durham/2004-02-18/bookshelf.html
"Wit and wisdom are in abundance in Dispatches...perhaps
the greatest value of these candid 'dispatches' is in simply articulating
the truths about domestic life...as valuable as it is entertaining."
--Body and Soul Magazine
"Fox is daring and refreshingly honest when she questions
what it means to be a good mother and whether a woman must give
up herself in order to be considered a successful parent."
--the New Orleans Times Picayune
"A poignant memoir of motherhood in the new millennium."
--the Ft. Myers News Press
"I devoured this book. Passionate, angry, honest and intelligent,
the
antidote to What to Expect When You're
Expecting, it's one every pregnant
or planning-to-be-pregnant woman with a modicum of ambition would
do well to read."
--Cathi Hanauer, editor of The Bitch in
the House: 26
Women Tell the Truth about Sex, Solitude, Work, Motherhood and
Marriage
"...the issues [Fox] raises are of
vital concern to high-achieving women, and she addresses them
with passion and thoughtfulness."
--the Radcliffe Quarterly
"Funny, human, and complicated--a bold new book on motherhood,
feminism and the survival of the self raises the bar for popular
Mother Lit. Dispatches is a deliberate
and thoughtful record of the growth and development of a woman
who is also a writer, wife and mother--a woman who refuses to
allow her selfhood to wither like a neglected houseplant just
because she's completely in love with her husband and children...A
highly original, genuinely funny, sometimes outrageous and sometimes
profoundly moving book, Dispatches
also has an agenda. Fox wields her sharply-pointed wit so artfully
the reader may not always be aware that her objective is to poke
enough holes in the one-dimensional caricature of the selfless,
stressed-out mom to free the warm-blooded woman who lives inside.
Upstart mothers who yearn to tip over the sacred cow of motherhood--and
all other mothers, for that matter--owe it to themselves to read
this book."
--Judith Stadtman Tucker, the Mothers
Movement Online
Click here to read the whole review: http://www.mothersmovement.org/books/reviews/dispatches.htm
"...a memoir in the sassy 'rebellious mothering' tradition
of Anne Lamott's Operating Instructions
and the writers in The Bitch in the House.
Fox writes in the voice of your best friend: smart, funny, and
not afraid to tell you what motherhood is really like."
--Brain, Child
"What a gift. This book shines a much-needed light into the
despair of new
motherhood--and the guilt that comes with it. "I have so
much," we cry.
"What right do I have to feel bad?" But the heartbreak
of motherhood is
real. From the hormonal imbalances to the social isolation to
the cultural
pressures to be a Perfect Mom, Faulkner Fox hunts down the causes
of our
maternal blues--and brilliantly searches out the ultimate cure."
--Ariel Gore, author of The Mother Trip
and The Hip Mama Survival Guide
"A young feminist pulls no punches in her examination
of motherhood. Fox candidly reveals her ambivalence, frustrations,
and anger about the stresses imposed on women when they have children.
Although she interviewed other young mothers, looking for confirmation
that they shared her feelings, her personal story holds center
stage here. (Indeed, Fox found many interviewees reluctant to
admit their frustrations with maternity.) Her youthful vision
of an uncluttered, stress-free life with a house, a man, and a
child, she admits, was a fantasy. The reality, she learns, is
that it's not easy to combine selfhood with motherhood, to balance
a writing career with childcare, or to achieve egalitarian parenthood.
To explain to the reader where she's coming from, Fox shows herself
as a single woman: ambitious, edgy, fighting for liberal causes,
looking to find a feminist prince. Once married to her prince,
she discovers that pregnancy changes everything. Issues of control
are real: How does one choose to be in control of birth and at
the same time choose to avoid excruciating pain?...As a nursing
mother, Fox finds that her husband's parenting duties and hers
are clearly out of balance. Keeping a record of time spent on
a chart called "Frequent Parenting Miles," she tallies
in quarter hours what she figures her spouse owes her. Collect
she does, and in the process conducts a mild flirtation that leads
the couple into therapy and eventually into a more equitable partnership.
Fox also explores her attempts to connect with other women, a
task she finds far more difficult once husbands and children are
part of all their lives. Her very honest account exudes relief
at the chance to express her feelings and a measure of pride that
she has faced some of motherhood's inherent conflicts, if not
entirely resolved them.
Unconventional, challenging, even warm and funny."
--Kirkus Reviews
"In this frank and often amusing memoir...Fox ponders
the oppressive and redemptive nature of housekeeping and child
rearing and the never-ending selflessness required of mothers.
Women of various political perspectives will appreciate this honest
look at the rigors of motherhood."
--Booklist
"...irresistible reading."
--Montclair Times
Click here to read the whole review:
http://www.montclairtimes.com/page.php?page=6975
"throughly enjoy[able] because of the unbridled honesty behind Fox's words
and thoughts."
--Austin FIT Magazine
Click here to read the whole review:
http://www.austinfitmagazine.com/archive/2004-03-March/UnderCovers.htm
"Fox writes honestly and cleanly about her experience [with] great wit and
insight..."
--City Magazine (Rochester, NY)
"Dispatches is a hard-hitting book indeed. Its sharp critiques are
well-blended with humor, though, to make an enjoyable read...refreshing and
disturbing all at the same time; it's what so many have felt and lived but
have been either too tired or too scared to discuss.... Dispatches is truly
unlike any other book on motherhood. By acknowledging the unncessary
things that put pressure on women, particularly mothers, Fox sparks the
desire to correct them. She reminds mothers that they can embrace their
individuality, and still care for and love their child unconditionally.
Through her own enlightenment about motherhood and domesticity, she offers
a channel for mothers to relinquish their guilt."
--The Tidewater Review (VA)
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Dispatches
from a Not-So-Perfect Life: or How I Learned to Love the House,
the Man, the Child
Available at

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