Midlife Crisis At 30: How the Stakes Have Changed for a New Generation- and What to Do About It by Lia Macko, Kerry Rubin, Kerry Rubin

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
  • Pub. Date: February 2005
  • ISBN-13: 9780452286061
  • 304pp
  • Edition Description: Reprint
 
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Synopsis

At the age of 30:
• Financial strategist and bestselling author Suze Orman was a waitress
• Former vice-presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro was a stay-at-home mom
• Political strategist Mary Matalin was a first-year law student-and about to drop out
• CNN anchor Paula Zahn was unemployed


Midlife Crisis at 30 offers hope for many of today's twenty- and thirty-somethings struggling with the unreasonable expectations that society and the media have placed on them. As a result of these powerful influences, many women blame themselves for not overcoming the very real obstacles to their fulfillment that still exist in American society. Raised to believe they could "have it all" in every part of their lives at a young age, these young women are exhausted, confused, and desperate to find the middle ground where they can enjoy full, well-rounded lives before it is too late.

Through the candid and revealing stories of the "New Girls Club," a group of successful women, such as Geraldine Ferraro, Judy Blume, Susan Sarandon, and Denise Austin, who have solved the work/life/love puzzle, Midlife Crisis at 30 presents pragmatic strategies and realistic suggestions for young women everywhere.

Library Journal

Macko and Rubin (both television news producers) eloquently capture the bewildering stresses and strains that middle-class American women aged 25 to 37 face in managing the often mutually exclusive arenas of career, kids, husband, and body. The authors maintain that women must move beyond the cultural expectations associated with contemporary "success" and achieve their own personal balance. In an intense, sometimes edgy tone, they focus on whether women can realistically "have it all," all at once. Mentoring is provided via the personal stories of notable women; stories like Judy Blume's cogent discussion of balance will have wide appeal, but others are rather unrealistic, as when Mary Matalin talks about her nanny. Read in conjunction with Sherene Schostak and Stefanie Iris Weiss's Surviving Saturn's Return: Vital Lessons for Overcoming Life's Most Tumultuous Cycle, this book provides much food for thought. The only drawback: it's unnecessarily long. Essential for women's studies programs and recommended for all public libraries. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

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Biography

Lia Macko is an executive producer at MSNBC and holds a law degree from Georgetown University.
Kerry Rubin is a producer at CNN and a graduate of the University of Rochester.

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