". . . And Ladies of the Club"

by HELEN HOOVEN SANTMYER

". . . And Ladies of the Club"

by HELEN HOOVEN SANTMYER

eBook

$14.99  $19.95 Save 25% Current price is $14.99, Original price is $19.95. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

This New York Times best seller by Helen Hooven Santmyer recounts the lives of a group of women who start a study club in a small town in southwestern Ohio in 1868. Over the years, the club evolves into an influential community service organization in the town. Numerous characters are introduced in the course of the novel but primary are Anne Gordon and Sally Rausch who, as the book begins, are new graduates of the Waynesboro Female Seminary. The novel covers decades of their lives—chronicling the two women’s marriages and those of their children and grandchildren. Santmyer focuses not just on the lives of the women in the club, but also their families and friends and the politics and developments in their small town and the larger world.
In this longest and most ambitious of Santmyer’s books, there is—as with all of her previous work—a poignant sense of a past made present again through an acute sensibility, of human life and experience as somehow cumulative, and of lives and events, largely fugitive and forgotten, as captured and transformed as the stuff of her poetry.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814276792
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Publication date: 10/01/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 1184
Sales rank: 43,794
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

In addition to her career as a writer, Helen Hooven Santmyer was a Professor of English and Dean of Women at Cedarville College. She graduated from Wellesley College and Oxford University.
 

Table of Contents

". . . And Ladies of the Club" by Helen Hooven Santmyer HALF TITLE PAGE TITLE PAGE COPYRIGHT PAGE SECOND HALF TITLE PAGE 1868 (A) "The formation of the Waynesboro Woman's Club was first proposed in the early summer of 1868." 1868 (B) "Six other Waynesboro ladies were consulted." 1868 (C) "The formal organization of the Club was effected . . ." 1868 (D) "At the Club party, 1868, tableaux were the order of the evening." 1869 "The first year of the Club's existence was a momentous one in the lives of several of its members." 1870 "The Club sponsored a Lecture Course." 1872 "For the first time the Grim Reaper . . ." 1873–1874 "For the only time in its history, members of our Club were arraigned in police court." 1875 "The organization of a subscription library . . ." 1875–1876 "A year of change for Waynesboro and the Woman's Club. . ." 1877 "The dark angel... the boatman pale . . ." 1878 "A new Club bride was honored . . ." 1879 (A) "The Club members are concerned about the education of their children." 1879 (B) "The Club lost a devoted and loyal member . . ." 1880 "A wedding of interest to the ladies . . ." 1880–1881 "We take our politics seriously . . ." 1884–1885 "Waynesboro was shocked by the loss of its most distinguished citizen . . ." 1885–1886 "The Club accepts with regret the resignation of its first President." 1886 "Again the fatal asterisk of death . . ." 1886–1887 "Waynesboro suffers the loss of Dr. Blair, its greatest man and scholar; we sympathize with his daughter." 1887–1888 "The children we call 'ours' are beginning their careers in the adult world." 1892 "One of our daughters returned to her home . . ." 1892–1893 "The twenty-fifth anniversary year of our Club was highlighted by the weddings of two of our daughters." 1894–1895 "The Club extends sympathy . . . and offers congratulations . . ." 1895–1896 "The Club is determined that Waynesboro shall have a free public library." 1898 "On Independence Day we celebrate a Club anniversary, a housewarming, and a great victory." 1900–1902 "The turn of the century! The first years of the twentieth century bring changes to the Club: the loss of old dearly loved members and friends; new members, daughters of the Club who have grown up . . ." 1904–1905 "We lose two of our members to 'Sunny California' . . ." 1908 "Old members depart, death takes another charter member, but new members are added to our roll . . ." 1909 "We lament the passing of still another charter member, although she died far away from her old home, which she had left a number of years ago." 1913 "Waynesboro and the Woman's Club strive to meet the crisis of 1913 . . ." 1914–1916 "The Waynesboro Woman's Club continues its quiet way while the Great War rages, and we knit and roll bandages" 1916–1924 "The Woman's Club survives the Great War . . ." 1925–1929 "The Club congratulates its new bride . . ." 1929 "We grieve over the loss of another charter member, but rejoice with our youngest on the publication of her first book . . ." 1930–1932 "The end of an era: we lose the last of our charter members . . ."
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews