Operating Instructions: A Journal of My Son's First Year by Anne Lamott

BUY IT NEW

  • $13.95 List price
  • $12.55 Online price (Save 10%)
  • $11.29 Member price
  • Join Now
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9781400079094&productCode=BK&maxCount=100&threshold=3

Usually ships within 24 hours

FIND & RESERVE AN IN-STORE COPY

Enter a zip code

(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Publisher: Random House Inc
  • Pub. Date: March 2005
  • ISBN-13: 9781400079094
  • Sales Rank: 18,889
  • 272pp
  • Edition Description: Reprint
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Meet the Writer
  • Features
  • Full Product Details

Synopsis

It’s not like she’s the only woman to ever have a baby. At thirty-five. On her own. But Anne Lamott makes it all fresh in her now-classic account of how she and her son and numerous friends and neighbors and some strangers survived and thrived in that all important first year. From finding out that her baby is a boy (and getting used to the idea) to finding out that her best friend and greatest supporter Pam will die of cancer (and not getting used to that idea), with a generous amount of wit and faith (but very little piousness), Lamott narrates the great and small events that make up a woman’s life.

Annotation

It seems no mother of a newborn has ever been more hilarious, more honest, or more touching than Lamott is within these pages. As a single parent she struggles to support her little family by her wits and writing, learning that blessings and losses come together.

Publishers Weekly

Magazine columnist and novelist Lamott ( All New People ) captures both the poignancy and comedy of her first year as a single mother in this wonderfully candid diary. Her quirky humor steadily draws the reader into her unconventional world as she describes her friends and neighbors in northern California, her participation in a local church, her experiences as a recovering alcoholic and--best of all--her infant son, Sam, born in 1989. She covers maternal emotions from rapturous bliss to bare fury (``In the middle of the colic death marches, I end up looking at the baby with those hooded eyes that were in the old ads for The Boston Strangler ''). Throughout, she airs her strong political and religious beliefs. And when her best friend, Pammy, is diagnosed with terminal cancer, Lamott conveys her anguish with the same depth of feeling and sense of the absurd that characterize her observations about her son, God, recovery, writing, Republicans, men and life as usual. Even non-parents will enjoy this glowing work. (May)

More Reviews and Recommendations

Biography

In novels such as Rosie and Hard Laughter and in her nonfiction tomes touching on everything from writing to motherhood, Anne Lamott presents a biting wit and self-pity-free look at life's tougher trials. Lamott skates on the edge of dysfunction, but faces the side of spirit and humor.

More About the Author

Customer Reviews

What Ever Happened to Sam Lamottby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

August 09, 2008: If you really want to know what happened to Sam Lamott, then check out Penrith Farms online, where Sam went for rehab and psychological treatment for most of last year. Sam 'blew a fuse' when he was about fifteen. Neglected at home while his mother was on the road, Sam was selling drugs at school and using them, too. Anne Lamott pulled Sam out of school and sent him to a series of boot camps for teens, where Sam was supposed to get clean and improve his life. This is the part of Sam's life that Anne Lamott won't tell her public, because it would make all of her writing look like an extended ego trip and the raising of Sam Lamott a total failure. Anne Lamott might be a very good writer, but she is not an honest person. That's what happened to Sam Lamott.

An extraordinary effortby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

May 18, 2003: As a new mother, I was recently told to read OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS immediately! I had never heard of Anne Lamott, but now I plan to read all her work. It was just extraordinary. The pages crackle with life and an effervescent sense of humor that compels. This book is so popular; surely the poignancy is what readers respond to, as well as the unvarnished truth of motherhood. I highly recommend this, along with THE ZYGOTE CHRONICLES by Suzanne Finnamore, which was also a great read and so moving and funny, just like OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS.


More Customer Reviews