Old Enough: Southern Women Artists and Writers on Creativity and Aging
By Jay Lamar (Editor), Jennifer Horne (Editor), Katie Lamar Jackson (Editor), Wendy Reed (Editor), Carolyn Sherer (Photographer), Gail Andrews (Contribution by), Sara Garden Armstrong (Contribution by), Carmen Agra Deedy (Contribution by), Patricia Foster (Contribution by), Patricia Gaines (Contribution by), Mary Gauthier (Contribution by), Patti Callahan Henry (Contribution by), Jennifer Horne (Contribution by), Angela Jackson-Brown (Contribution by), Jay Lamar (Contribution by), Katie Lamar Jackson (Contribution by), Nevin Mercede (Contribution by), Cecilia Rodriguez Milanés (Contribution by), Janisse Ray (Contribution by), Wendy Reed (Contribution by), Carolyn Sherer (Contribution by), Anne Strand (Contribution by), Jeanie Thompson (Contribution by), Jacqueline Allen Trimble (Contribution by), Lila Quintero Weaver (Contribution by), Yvonne Wells (Contribution by)
Hardcover
$36.95
By Jay Lamar (Editor), Jennifer Horne (Editor), Katie Lamar Jackson (Editor), Wendy Reed (Editor), Carolyn Sherer (Photographer), Gail Andrews (Contribution by), Sara Garden Armstrong (Contribution by), Carmen Agra Deedy (Contribution by), Patricia Foster (Contribution by), Patricia Gaines (Contribution by), Mary Gauthier (Contribution by), Patti Callahan Henry (Contribution by), Jennifer Horne (Contribution by), Angela Jackson-Brown (Contribution by), Jay Lamar (Contribution by), Katie Lamar Jackson (Contribution by), Nevin Mercede (Contribution by), Cecilia Rodriguez Milanés (Contribution by), Janisse Ray (Contribution by), Wendy Reed (Contribution by), Carolyn Sherer (Contribution by), Anne Strand (Contribution by), Jeanie Thompson (Contribution by), Jacqueline Allen Trimble (Contribution by), Lila Quintero Weaver (Contribution by), Yvonne Wells (Contribution by)
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In Old Enough, twentyone women artists and writers write about the experience of aging. Gay, straight, unmarried, partnered, widowed, Black, white, Latinx, retired, and working, these women are not squeamish about the challenges of growing older, including ageism, health concerns, and loss. And they are frank about how received notions of female aging can be restrictive and diminishing. But in lyrical, sometimes wry, often inspiring essays they explore what growing older can offer: selfkn...






















