Foreverland
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- $22.99
Publisher Description
“Full of razor-sharp, big-hearted wisdom…. Couples should read this book aloud to each other instead of writing vows. People who never want to get married should read this book anyway.” —Leslie Jamison
An illuminating, poignant, and savagely funny examination of modern marriage from Ask Polly advice columnist Heather Havrilesky
If falling in love is the peak of human experience, then marriage is the slow descent down that mountain, on a trail built from conflict, compromise, and nagging doubts. Considering the limited economic advantages to marriage, the deluge of other mate options a swipe away, and the fact that almost half of all marriages in the United States end in divorce anyway, why do so many of us still chain ourselves to one human being for life?
In Foreverland, Heather Havrilesky illustrates the delights, aggravations, and sublime calamities of her marriage over the span of fifteen years, charting an unpredictable course from meeting her one true love to slowly learning just how much energy is required to keep that love aflame. This refreshingly honest portrait of a marriage reveals that our relationships are not simply “happy” or “unhappy,” but something much murkier—at once unsavory, taxing, and deeply satisfying. With tales of fumbled proposals, harrowing suburban migrations, external temptations, and the bewildering insults of growing older, Foreverland is a work of rare candor and insight. Havrilesky traces a path from daydreaming about forever for the first time to understanding what a tedious, glorious drag forever can be.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
In this brutally honest memoir of her marriage, advice columnist Heather Havrilesky goes out of her way to present herself in the worst possible light: socially awkward, caustically judgmental, sometimes just plain mean. (At one point, she literally reminds us “I’m the villain of this story.”) Havrilesky is just as hard on her university professor husband, whose sneeze she describes as “a blast from an air horn aimed at your face.” Although she doesn’t seem all that hot on the entire concept of marriage—repeatedly describing it as being stuck with one deeply annoying person until one of you dies—Havrilesky is a talented writer who transforms her litany of woes into genuinely hilarious stories about “the divine tedium” of domesticity. That storytelling talent, as well as Havrilesky’s endearingly self-effacing honesty about her own foibles, makes Foreverland an insightful and fun listen—her affection for her husband and daughters is audible even while she’s roasting them.