
American Wife
A Novel
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Narrated by:
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Kimberly Farr
About this listen
New York Times best seller.
Named one of the 10 best books of the year: Time, People, and Entertainment Weekly.
A kind, bookish only child born in the 1940s, Alice Lindgren has no idea that she will one day end up in the White House, married to the president. In her small Wisconsin hometown she learns the virtues of politeness, but a tragic accident when she is 17 shatters her identity and changes the trajectory of her life. More than a decade later, when the charismatic son of a powerful Republican family sweeps her off her feet, she is surprised to find herself admitted into a world of privilege.
And when her husband unexpectedly becomes governor and then president, she discovers that she is married to a man she both loves and fundamentally disagrees with - and that her private beliefs increasingly run against her public persona. As her husband’s presidency enters its second term, Alice must confront contradictions years in the making and face questions nearly impossible to answer.
Named one of the best books of the year: The New York Times Book Review, Chicago Tribune, NPR, Rocky Mountain News, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, The Washington Post Book World.
©2008 Curtis Sittenfeld (P)2008 Random House, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
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Critic reviews
"A gorgeously written novel that weaves class, wealth, race, and fate into a brilliant portrait of a first lady. (From the author of Rodham and Eligible)
“Terrific...an intelligent, bighearted novel about a controversial political dynasty.” (Entertainment Weekly)
American Wife
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The amazing creation of the wife’s persona— a strong support and love for a husband who views she does not share.
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Excellent book, limited recording
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A rendering of life inside politics
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My favorite, was listening to the narrator, Kimberly Farr. Her voice is so clear and lovely that towards the end of this book, I wished there were more chapters left and that I could listen to her express the writers insights for much longer than when the story ends. This book becomes greater because of this narrator. Bravo, Kimberly Farr. 🎉🤗🙏
Each of Us Must Endure, Our World Filled With Changes
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Really good!
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The similarities of Barbara Bush and Alice.
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A good listen
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Because American Wife is far more than just Laura Bush’s life dressed up as fiction.
Don’t get me wrong: the broad strokes are there. The bookish only child of a family in a small town who as a teenager a car accident that kills a fellow high school classmate (a first love never fulfilled thanks to fate). Who then, as a young woman, becomes a school librarian before having something of a whirlwind romance with the black sheep son of a prominent Republican family despite herself being a Democrat. A marriage with ups and downs that includes his alcoholism while managing a MLB team, his (and their daughter’s) becoming a Born Again Christian, and an unlikely road leading to the White House and a presidency that becomes increasingly unpopular. All of which, drawn from the life of Laura Bush, are all present in Sittenfeld’s narrative.
Yet Alice Blackwell, nee Lindgren, and her life have far more to them. Indeed, much of the controversy around American Wife in 2008 dealt with Sittenfeld’s additions and presumed assumptions (including having her future first lady protagonist having an abortion as a teenager in 1963). Time affords distance and it is easier now to see the richly drawn figure that Sittenfeld created in Alice from the basic facts of a real-life person. The story of a woman’s wife, taking us and her older self on a journey which begins with her grandmother and her friendship with a woman doctor in Chicago even before the tragedy that changes Alice’s life forever after. For much of its length, perhaps surprisingly given its reputation, American Wife moves between genres from coming-of-age, romance, and the story of a clearly loving but sometimes difficult marriage as it hits difficulties in middle-age. The story of a life that, as Alice puts on early in the novel, has been lived in opposition to itself. Or is it, given the facts that we learn of her life?
The novel in some ways feels like an answer in fiction to a question that I myself asked from the middle of the Bush presidency onward: What do people see in that guy? The answer is seen through Alice’s eyes of a charming, if not always bright, man. Loving, funny (if sometimes rude), great in bed (described in lurid detail), and who struggles to find a purpose in life. Charlies Blackwell, like Alice, may share plenty in common with the real-life President of the time but is very much a character in his own right. Indeed, to my surprise, there were times I found myself smiling and even laughing at what he had to say. Yet, like his real-life counterpart and Alice herself, it wasn’t hard to understand why their presidency had all but come apart at the seams by its end.
Indeed the closing section has lost little of its relevancy in the past fifteen years. Set late in Charlie’s presidency with an unpopular war in the Middle East raging and a fight to get an anti-choice justice onto the Supreme Court, it becomes the moment that Alice’s past all but comes back to haunt her, along with the choices she’s made. Choices which have, she’s told, contributed to an ever dividing country, thousands of deaths, and the potential loss to a service she herself partook in nearly a half-century earlier. The talking points about the Iraq War may feel quaint now, but in a world where Roe v Wade has been overturned and the culpability of voters in picking a candidate unfit for the Oval Office are ever present issues, American Wife and its commentary continues to have a timely quality to it.
Even if it’s less a political novel and more the story of an unlikely figure sucked into the world of Washington politics, wondering about the life choices that led them to it.
A Life in Opposition
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Democratic tale fictionalizing Laura Bush’s life
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