Now for a few words about women
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March is known for St. Patrick’s Day, March Madness and the Ides of
March, but many don’t realize that it is also Women’s History Month.
The theme for this year’s celebration is “Women Change America.”
Since its beginnings in 1978 -- with a Women’s History Week started
by an education task force in Sonoma County -- the celebration grew
into a National Women’s History Week in 1981. In 1987, due to the overwhelming response across the nation, Congress created National
Women’s History Month.
In honor of this celebration, we would like to recommend some
excellent reading about some outstanding American women. Janann
Sherman’s “No Place for a Woman: A Life of Senator Margaret Chase
Smith,” part of the Rutgers series on women and politics, sounds like
pretty dry reading. But Sherman’s exhaustive research of
congressional papers and interviews has resulted in a fascinating and
readable book. Smith served in Congress from 1940 to 1972 as a
representative and senator from Maine, the first woman to serve in
both houses. She was also the first senator to denounce Sen. Joseph
McCarthy, and she was the first woman to have her name placed in
nomination for president by either of the major parties.
Another terrific biography -- actually an autobiography --
presents a woman in government, only this time in the executive
branch. Madeleine Albright served as the United States’ ambassador to
the United Nations under President Clinton, and later was unanimously
approved by Congress to serve as secretary of state. In “Madam
Secretary: A Memoir,” Albright gives a thorough, but witty account of
her life as a Czechoslovakian refugee who earned a doctorate from
Columbia and went on to serve both the academic world and the world
of politics and international relations.
Two famous American writers have also published recent
autobiographies.
Poet and novelist Marge Piercy writes with candor about a horrible
early life in a tough Detroit neighborhood, followed by a wild and
peripatetic adulthood. She peppers these events with charming
vignettes of the many cats she has befriended. In “Sleeping with
Cats: A Memoir,” Piercy describes how she has become the “cat lady”
of her small Cape Cod town. The book offers some reflections on
creativity and aging and the celebration of the present.
Maya Angelou’s “A Song Flung Up to Heaven” is the final part of
her autobiographical series, which began with “I Know Why the Caged
Bird Sings.” In it, she tells of the devastation wrought by the
deaths of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, which threw her into
complete isolation from the world. The book ends with her recovery
and coming full circle to begin writing the groundbreaking, “I Know
Why the Caged Bird Sings.”
There are just so many fascinating famous and infamous women whose
lives are as interesting as any novel. Why not take some time this
month to read a little about one of them? The reference staff at the
library can offer some reader’s advisory service and direct you to
well-written books about women in different endeavors who have,
indeed, changed America.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Sara Barnicle. All titles may be
reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at
https://www.newportbeach library.org. For more information on the
Central Library or any of the branch locations, please contact the
Newport Beach Public Library at (949) 717-3800, option 2.
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