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| Preface | xix | |
| 1 | Heart | |
| Good-bye Dr. Spock | 9 | |
| Our Tired, Our Poor, Our Kids | 17 | |
| Doing Nothing Is Something | 23 | |
| No Privilege for Parents | 29 | |
| In Search of a Grown-up | 35 | |
| Playing God on No Sleep | 40 | |
| Playing Perfect Patty-cake | 46 | |
| Mom Quixote | 51 | |
| Now It's Time for Generation Next | 56 | |
| Daughter of the Groom | 62 | |
| Fall from the Nest | 67 | |
| The C Word in the Hallways | 72 | |
| School's Out for Summer | 78 | |
| A New Roof on an Old House | 84 | |
| 2 | Mind | |
| A Quilt of a Country | 98 | |
| Staring Across a Great Divide | 104 | |
| The Widows and the Wounded | 109 | |
| Welcome to Animal House | 115 | |
| The Drug That Pretends It Isn't | 121 | |
| The Problem of the Color Line | 127 | |
| A Conspiracy of Notebooks | 133 | |
| Happy Leader, Happy Nation | 139 | |
| It's the Cult of Personality | 145 | |
| The Sins of the Fathers | 151 | |
| Lead Us Not | 157 | |
| The Right to Be Ordinary | 161 | |
| The Power of One | 167 | |
| Smoke Gets in Your Eyes | 172 | |
| 17 Going on 18 | 178 | |
| The Call from the Governor | 183 | |
| Indivisible? Wanna Bet? | 189 | |
| The Sounds of Silence | 194 | |
| 3 | Body | |
| The Reasonable Woman Standard | 206 | |
| Barbie at 35 | 212 | |
| Say Farewell to Pin Curls | 217 | |
| Our Radical, Ourselves | 222 | |
| An Era Ends | 227 | |
| And Now for a Hot Flash | 232 | |
| Sexual Assault, Film at Eleven | 237 | |
| And Now, Babe Feminism | 243 | |
| Uncle Sam and Aunt Samantha | 248 | |
| The Lone Pilgrim | 254 | |
| Say Good-bye to the Virago | 259 | |
| Not a Womb in the House | 264 | |
| 4 | Voice | |
| The Key to Success | 276 | |
| The Story of Us | 287 | |
| Off with Their Ties | 296 | |
| Oh, Godot | 303 | |
| 5 | Soul | |
| Life After Death | 318 | |
| Anniversary | 323 | |
| Leg Waxing and Life Everlasting | 332 | |
| Watching the World Go By | 338 | |
| Aha! Caught You Reading | 344 | |
| With a No. 2 Pencil, Delete | 350 | |
| Poetry Emotion | 355 | |
| In Memoriam: One Real Pip | 360 | |
| Imagining the Hansons | 366 | |
| Everything Is Under Control | 372 | |
| Honestly--You Shouldn't Have | 378 | |
| Armed with Only a Neutral Lipstick | 384 | |
| Weren't We All So Young Then? | 390 | |
| Look at What They've Done | 396 | |
| One Day, Now Broken in Two | 401 | |
| We Are Here for Andrea | 406 | |
| Every Day, Angels | 411 |
Anonymous
Posted April 24, 2004
I always enjoy reading Anna Quindlen's books and essays, and this one doesn't disappoint. She always offers fresh insights and musings on everyday issues.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted April 22, 2004
I enjoyed Quindlen's breezy writing style. Her opinions on topics such as the death penalty, abuse of women, and parenting are intriguing and insightful. People who enjoy her essays will thoroughly enjoy this book.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted April 17, 2004
Popular novelist, Pulitzer Prize winning columnist Anna Quindlen is a phenomenon. To read her is to be invigorated, inspired, and informed. To hear her read her work is to press this audio on friends, saying, 'You simply have to listen to this!' First written for the New York Times and Newsweek, this selection of articles is penned in trademark Quindlenese - candid, provocative, thoughtful, and insightful. Few subjects escape her discerning eye as she thinks aloud about raising children, politics, the aftermath of 9/11, global events, and more. People Magazine said, '.....Quindlen is so good that even when you disagree with what she says, you still love the way she says it.' How true. One marvels at her artful phrasing, her sagacity and sense of humor. Listening to 'Loud and Clear' is both a privilege and a pleasure.
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Posted April 27, 2010
No text was provided for this review.
Overview
In this remarkable book, Anna Quindlen, one of America’s favorite novelists and a Pulitzer Prize– winning columnist, once again gives us wisdom, opinions, insights, and reflections about current events and modern life. “Always insightful, rooted in everyday experience and common sense...Quindlen is so good that even when you disagree with what she says, you still love the way she says it,” said People magazine about her number one New York Times bestseller Thinking Out Loud, and the same can be said about Loud and Clear.With her trademark insight and her special ability to convey the impact public events have on ordinary lives, Quindlen here combines ...