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Her Brilliant Career

Ten Extraordinary Women of the Fifties

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An exuberant group biography—"a splendidly various collection of 'brief lives' written with both gusto and sensitivity" (The Guardian)—that follows ten women in 1950s Britain whose pioneering lives paved the way for feminism and laid the foundation of modern women's success.

In Her Brilliant Career, Rachel Cooke goes back in time to offer an entertaining and iconoclastic look at ten women in the 1950s—pioneers whose professional careers and complicated private lives helped to create the opportunities available to today's women. These plucky and ambitious individuals—among them a film director, a cook, an architect, an editor, an archaeologist, a race car driver—left the house, discovered the bliss of work, and ushered in the era of the working woman.

Daring and independent, these remarkable unsung heroines—whose obscurity makes their accomplishments all the more astonishing and relevant —loved passionately, challenged men's control, made their own mistakes, and took life on their own terms, breaking new ground and offering inspiration. Their individual portraits gradually form a landscape of 1950s culture, and women's unique—and rapidly evolving—role.

Before there could be a Danica Patrick, there had to be a Sheila van Damm; before there was Barbara Walters, there was Nancy Spain; before there was Kathryn Bigelow, came Muriel Box. The pioneers of Her Brilliant Career forever changed the fabric of culture, society, and the work force.

This is the Fifties, retold: vivid, surprising and, most of all, modern.

Her Brilliant Career is illustrated with more than 80 black-and-white photographs.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 1, 2014
      Acclaimed journalist Cook’s first book is an extensively researched narrative of the lives of 10 remarkable women who managed successful careers in 1950s Britain. The author works in details of their careers in fields such as gardening, cooking, archaeology, architecture, filmmaking, and law, as well as all their setbacks and triumphs. She also tackles her subjects’ private lives head on—from romance and motherhood to love triangles, affairs, and heartbreak. While the book provides a full sense of their cultural milieux at the time, including the social circles they travelled in, current events, and contemporaries in their fields. The excessive amount of detail, however, often becomes distracting: is there really a need for commentary on the state of a lawyer’s mascara? Unnecessary descriptions of the lives of people with whom these women had only a passing acquaintance are also frequent. Overall this book provides a thorough picture of these women’s lives, but their characters are drowned by the flood of detail. B&w photos. Agent: Peter Straus, (U.K.).

    • Library Journal

      July 1, 2014

      A hit in Britain, where it reached Amazon UK's Top 100, this book profiles ten professional women from the 1950s who broke ground for the working women of the Sixties onward as feminism hit its stride. Among those featured: journalist/broadcaster Nancy Spain and Academy Award-winning director and screenwriter Muriel Box. The accent is English, but the stories should be fascinating, and there's special in-house love for this book.

      Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      November 15, 2014

      Writer and critic Cooke's (contributor The Observer; New Statesman) debut asks the question: What were the lives of professional women like in postwar Britain? Inspired by an antique Ercol sideboard, the author wonders at the ambitions of the women who strove to own such a piece. Turning to a collection of memoirs, diaries, letters, interviews, and first-hand accounts, Cooke recalls the lives of ten women whose work had an impact on the way we think of modern film, architecture and landscaping, cooking, and even law--despite their names being relatively unknown today. Journalism/broadcaster Nancy Spain and Academy Award-winning director and screenwriter Muriel Box are among those featured. The stories are insightful and crafted with care; foregoing the nostalgia and idealization that often colors how we imagine the roles of women in the Fifties. The experiences described are anything but ordinary, though these women are not necessarily the feminist trailblazers some readers may expect to find. Cooke makes no assumptions regarding her subjects' attitudes and presents a balanced account that considers their personal and public lives. VERDICT A satisfying read for anyone interested in narratives about women's lives in the early to mid-20th century. [See Prepub Alert, 6/8/14.]--Gricel Dominguez, Florida International Univ. Lib.

      Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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