· Connie Schultz Recipes To Eat During lean times in The Daughters of Erietown, Ellie McGinty becomes an expert in turning a can of Spam into a casserole that can feed a family of six. · Starting this month is Connie Schultz, a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and New York Times bestselling author, whose latest book, "Daughters of Erietown," is released in . · USA TODAY columnist Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize winner whose novel, “The Daughters of Erietown,” is a New York Times bestseller. You can reach her at .
"Connie Schultz's The Daughters of Erietown is a quiet force of a novel. It crept up on me, much the same way that time creeps up on these characters. I was struck by how well Schultz portrays a full life--childhood to old age--and all the small moments that shape us, for better or for worse. Its ambitious scope will leave readers wanting to. Set in Northeast Ohio, Connie Schultz's first novel writes about working class women living in the fictional Erietown. Longtime columnist Connie Schultz grew up in Ashtabula, the daughter of a nurse's aide and utility worker. The Daughters of Erietown Connie Schultz. Random House, $28 (p) ISBN More By and About This Author. OTHER BOOKS. Life Happens: And Other Unavoidable Truths And His Lovely.
Connie Schultz’s novel The Daughters of Erietown spans the decades from the s through the s in the industrial town of Erietown, Ohio. Ellie is a high school girl madly in love with Brick, the star basketball player. Both are planning on going to college when Ellie discovers she is pregnant. The Daughters of Erietown by Connie Schultz. This book is a story of the lives of women in the s through the last seventies. Specifically in some cases about their lack of choice and the consequences of not having control over their choice to have children. I found the writing tedious and juvenile. Review. “Connie Schultz’s The Daughters of Erietown is a quiet force of a novel. It crept up on me, much the same way that time creeps up on these characters. I was struck by how well Schultz portrays a full life—childhood to old age—and all the small moments that shape us, for better or for worse.
0コメント