Old Wife's Tale, An: My Seven Decades in Love and War
 

An Old Wife's Tale: My Seven Decades in Love and War

by Midge Decter

"What has happened to me over the course of the past seven decades has in one way or another happened to many if not all present-day American women -- from the almost dizzyingly rapid ringing of changes to the discovery of that in our lives which is never changing."

One of the nation's most renowned female conservatives, Midge Decter is known for her frequently controversial... (read more)

Top tags: memoir (all tags)

Overview: Amazon Reviews

Freaking Brilliant....
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, April 7, 2004
Midge Decter may be the most eloquent female "Don Giovanni" since the Wife of Bath! Incredible stuff -- particularly her long (and sometimes painfully clinical) study of the clitoral orgasm.

Decter may no longer consider herself a feminist, but her book is positively jam-packed with what Simone de Beauvoir called the "joie de Tel Aviv."

How saddening
  • Rated 1 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, November 1, 2003
The perpetuation of women's subjugation by their own members is one of the saddest chapters in the millenia-long history of women's struggle for equality. I see it in my own grandmother's attitude toward my mother: a bitterness bordering on rage. How dare my mother pursue a successful career outside the home? I have not suffered because of it. Children have only to gain from the success of mothers outside the home, for it only increases their respect for their mothers in this increasingly economically-driven society to see the mom contribute tangibly to the economic life of the family. (This, of course, is not to say that the mothers who do stay home do not contribute economically to their families; rather, they support in intangible ways.)

It makes me sad to see the complete internalization of subjugation by Ms. Decter.

Not a well-written memoir
  • Rated 1 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, January 10, 2003
Midge Decter was a publishing executive, the executive editor of Harper's, a single mom in New York, studied at the Jewish Theological Center, and held a variety of other postions and roles, and yet fails to paint a portrait of any of the places or people she has encountered. I bought this book because it was described as a "Memoir," but it should be classified as an Essay instead. She spends plenty of time discussing her views on life, but none describing the colorful characters she has met and worked with, or the personal experiences that led to her political views. As a fan of autobiographies, I was dissappointed, and would suggest this book only to those who are interested in reading an essay about extremely conservative values and extremely traditional roles for women.
I have waited decades to read what she wrote.
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, January 2, 2003
I am of the same generation as Decter. She followed the lives of women chronologically during the past about fifty years up to the present. Her observations are exactly correct. It is very obvious how and why the lives of many of the younger women today are confused and in turmoil as a direct result of the feminist movement. We older gals are thankful that we were not and are not a part of the victimization imposed upon women the past thirty or so years. We like and love ourselves, our families and friends, and our men.
Claims to be Everywoman
  • Rated 4 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, September 4, 2002
I was initially put off by Decter's claim that she is a sort of Everywoman of the past 30 or so years. But I was surprised at how true it turned out to be. Her comments on most women's inner fears over the sexual revolution and the prospect of life without "a man" jived completely with my memories of the period. Her descriptions of the political climates of recent presidencies were also right on target.
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