Emerita Writes About Women Rewriting Their Lives
The Last Laugh
- Lynn Freed
Bess, Ruth and Dania, all about 70, are getting away from it all 鈥 鈥渘o service, no duty, no motherly or grandmotherly obligations鈥 鈥 hoping for a year of peace and quiet on an island in the Aegean Sea. But that鈥檚 wishful thinking in The Last Laugh, a new novel by Lynn Freed, a professor emerita of English.
Soon the women鈥檚 vacation is anything but, interrupted by everything from which they鈥檇 wanted to escape, and more: not only children and grandchildren, but sponging old lovers and a psychotic client.
鈥渁 Campari spritzer of a novel: bubbly and colorful, but with an underlying note of bitterness to add satisfying complexity.鈥
Indeed, as , 鈥淔reed is intent on something deeper, more unsettling: Can we ever really absent ourselves, even briefly, from the important people in our lives? Is it lunacy to think we have an essential self 鈥 a self that exists outside our relationships to other people? Why is freedom so terrifying?
鈥淚n the end,鈥 Alford wrote, 鈥淔reed鈥檚 candor works to lift the veil off the misperception that life after 60 consists mostly of conversations about sciatica or ceaseless and slightly abject devotion to a tiny, shivery dog.鈥
Freed taught at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis from 2000 to 2015, during which time she published House of Women and The Servants鈥 Quarters, her fifth and sixth novels. The Last Laugh is her seventh. Her other novels: Friends of the Family (1982), Home Ground (1986), The Bungalow (1993) and The Mirror (1997).
In the new book, according to the publisher, Counterpoint Press, Freed鈥檚 鈥渄eeply personal essays explore our most quintessential question: What makes a home?鈥
鈥淭raversing decades and continents and back again, The Romance of Elsewhere captures the dilemma of the expat and does so with Freed鈥檚 signature honesty and humor. She takes on subjects as disparate as Disneyland, lovers, eco-tourism, shopping, serious illness and the anomaly of writers who blossom into full power only in old age.鈥
Publishers Weekly describes Freed as 鈥渨ise, evocative and darkly humorous鈥 in her essays, all previously published. "This collection evokes different moods, different eras, and different places with an astute, frank, and pitch-perfect narrator," PW stated.
is a senior public information representative and editor of Dateline 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis, in the Office of Strategic Communications.