I can’t even finish Kate Bolick’s book without writing about
it. Essentially, this book is a combination of Bolick’s life throughout her
past forty plus years and how during certain milestones of her life this editor
came across a handful of women who were famously single during the eras of
their own time. All of these women are at one point unmarried and without
children, and in the pages of her book, Spinster, Bolick focuses on this aspect
of their life. While providing pieces and clips on each woman, Bolick sorts
through her own life in chronological order, where she identifies with each of
the woman’s singlehood.
Bolick has provided me with plenty of solid examples of
women who have not only survived, but thrived being without partner. Edna
Millay is one I’m particularly fond of. She was notorious for breaking hearts; having
had scandalous encounters with both men and women, it seemed Edna was never
quite meant for merely one person. Bollick explains that Edna had a way of
making people believe she was gorgeous despite not being particularly
astonishing physically, there was simply a presence about her, perhaps it was
her sure disposition and intellectual persona.
Edna Millay does eventually get married, but her marriage is
far from conventional, as her husband was known to often encourage open
relationships, for the both of them, and it seemed she was quite content with
the arrangement. I appreciate this perspective, as the current conventional and
monogmonous relationship that marriages are currently being built on are seemingly
not always the prefect option as their success rates are ever failing. Bolick
also explains that in today’s world, despite the fact that divorces are very
much acceptable, the promise of faithful marriages are commonly broken when
cheating often occurs. Perhaps unconventional relationships should be a little
less frowned upon.
What I love about this book is that Bolick admits to how
unsecure she be with her singlehood and how she sometimes wavers on her choice
of (or the choices the led her to) being without a partner. There are several
fragments where she mistrusts her decision and at times longs to be in a
committed relationship where she has someone to share the successes and bills
(in my case, orange juice) with.
I’ve admitted to myself that ending one of my relationships
was so heart retching because although the idea of marriage is not at all
appealing, if there were any person I were to marry, it would have been that
particular love. Bolick alludes to this exact secret, and quite regularly she
questions that very decision to end a specific long term relationship. She
explains that she can’t even step foot in an area of Brooklyn for flashes of an
old relationship come flooding back, a feeling, within Calgary, I am most
certainly familiar with; when we parted ways, a past partner surly took a piece
of me with him.
Ultimately Kate Bolick takes the negatively and often dreaded
approach to the term Spinster and turns it into something appealing, something
beautiful, perhaps even desirable? Despite being the 21st century,
woman are still readily asked about dating, sex, marriage and children first
and foremost, whereas men are excluded from this tyrant form of pressure and expectations.
What I truly love about this book is that each woman refuses to let the
cultural rules of our North American life rule their life. They don’t cave into
the pressures of society and their individualism shines through even at their
worst. Like Edna, who refuses to set aside her desires for the greater good or
to merely do what expected of her at the cost of what she needs to do to feel
alive. Simply, everything’s done on their own terms.
I don’t think Kate is promoting the reader to take on Spinsterhood,
I believe she is simply providing a great example of an alternative lifestyle
and really encouraging the reader to question their life choices, and this
could be any life choice. I think she is asking the reader: what made you
choose that path, desire or obligation?
Don't organize your life around the persuite of a mate because there are much more interesting things to be doing with your life.
ohhh i want to read this one... Joanne
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