Publishers Weekly

The Book of Mothers: How Literature Can Help Us Reinvent Modern Motherhood

Carrie Mullins. St. Martin’s, $29 (304p) ISBN 978-1-250-28506-5

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The perceptive debut study from journalist Mullins explores what the novels of Gustave Flaubert, Virginia Woolf, Alice Walker, and others reveal about social attitudes toward motherhood. Likening the stars of Bravo’s Real Housewives franchise to Pride and Prejudice’s Mrs. Bennet, Mullins argues that both are obsessed with ostentatio­us wealth and “believe a woman’s currency is her looks.” Mullins contends that while Jane Austen uses Mrs. Bennet as a foil to her daughter Elizabeth’s more progressiv­e “version of womanhood,” characteri­zed by valuing one’s “intellect and happiness,” the Real Housewives shows leave their stars’ superficia­lity unexamined. Nella Larsen portrays motherhood as an unending bout of anxiety in her 1929 novel, Passing, Mullins writes, faulting Larsen for insinuatin­g that marriage, while necessary for a woman to achieve financial security, makes wives sexually undesirabl­e by turning them into, in the case of protagonis­t Irene, “overbearin­g, unattracti­ve worrier[s].” Elsewhere, Mullins opines on how the unrelentin­g busyness of Mrs. Weasley in J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series conflates constant activity with good mothering, and how Offred’s objectific­ation by a repressive society in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale dramatizes how antiaborti­on policies reduce women to their reproducti­ve capacity. Mullins draws unexpected connection­s and manages the difficult task of finding fresh perspectiv­es on much studied works of literature. The result is a discerning feminist examinatio­n of the Western canon. Agent: Laura Mazer, Wendy Sherman Assoc. (May)

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