We Are Our Mothers Daughters
News correspondent Cokie Roberts, author of a meaningful book titled We are Our Mothers' Daughters, published in 1998, call number 001-170, discusses significant issues facing women today in her book. She takes her readers on a personal and political journey, exploring the diverse roles women have played throughout American history and the connections and distinctions among different generations of women. On a personal level, each essay is an introduction to several of the fascination women Roberts has encountered during the course of her
She concludes her book by her last chapter titled A Women's Place. I felt just as she was happy or sad. It's just one of those bookes, where from start to end you might cry or laugh. She discusses all the important roles of the women she wrote about and how they tie together. reporting career; she also relates powerful and moving life stories about the women in her life, like her mother former Congresswoman Lindy Boggs. She worked her writing by writing about the women that were close to her and extended from there to other fascinating women she encountered in her career. Roberts is very sincere to her feelings in her writing in this book. It also shows such a diversity of choices and perspectives available to women today and greatly affirms the bond of females powerful inter connection among all women, whatever their background. Roberts examines the nature of women's roles, from mother to mechanic, sister to soldier, from her personal experience. I would suggest anyone interested in where a women belong and the history of women should read this selection. She begins her writing with the intense story of her sister, whom dies from cancer at a young age. Roberts takes you through intimate stories of extraordinary women; these women become the beginning for more extensive discussions of women's position in politics, business, motherhood, and marriage, as well as other issues. The story of her mothers life as a politician next.
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