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The New York Times
Melanie Gideon does not have a story of divorce, death or abuse to tell. Nor does she write of recovery from cancer, drug addiction or even a miserable childhood. Her memoir, The Slippery Year, bears the subtitle "A Meditation on Happily Ever After"…With self-effacing humor, [she] chronicles the mundanity and small epiphanies of everyday life: taking a trip to Trader Joe's on her 44th birthday, waiting in the car-pool line at her 9-year-old son's school and spending thousands of dollars to buy a mattress that both she and her husband of nearly two decades can tolerate…"Sometimes you have to leave the country to jar yourself awake, and sometimes you have to just go more deeply into your own life," [Gideon] said.—Motoko Rich
Overview
The Slippery Year chronicles her struggle to rediscover meaning and pleasure in life while navigating the comical ups and downs of cohabiting with a husband, a child, and a dog: mattress wars with her snoring mate, the psychological minefield of the...