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| Works by
Sue Miller (Writer)
[November 29, 1943 - ] |
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Profile created February 1, 2008
Note:
Sue Miller was married to the author
Douglas Bauer.
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The Story of My Father: A Memoir
(2004)
In the fall of 1988, Sue Miller found herself caring
for her father, James Nichols, once a truly vital man, as he succumbed to
Alzheimer’s
Disease. Beginning an intensely personal journey, she recalls the
bitter irony of watching this church historian wrestle with his
increasingly befuddled notion of time and meaning. She details the
struggles with doctors, her own choices, and the attempt to find a caring
response to a disease whose special cruelty is to diminish the humanity of
those it strikes. In luminous prose, Sue Miller has fashioned a
compassionate inventory of two lives, a memoir destined to offer comfort
to all sons and daughters struggling to make peace with their fathers and
with themselves.
The Senator's Wife (2008)
Once again Sue Miller takes us deep into the private
lives of women with this mesmerizing portrait of two marriages exposed in
all their shame and imperfection, and in their obdurate, unyielding love.
The author of the iconic The Good Mother and the best-selling
While I Was Gone brings her marvelous gifts to a powerful story of two
unconventional women who unexpectedly change each other’s lives.
Meri is newly married, pregnant, and standing on the cusp of her life as a
wife and mother, recognizing with some terror the gap between reality and
expectation. Delia Naughton—wife of the two-term liberal senator Tom
Naughton—is Meri’s new neighbor in the adjacent New England town house.
Delia’s husband’s chronic infidelity has been an open secret in Washington
circles, but despite the complexity of their relationship, the bond
between them remains strong. What keeps people together, even in the midst
of profound betrayal? How can a journey imperiled by, and sometimes
indistinguishable from, compromise and disappointment culminate in healing
and grace? Delia and Meri find themselves leading strangely parallel
lives, both reckoning with the contours and mysteries of marriage, one
refined and abraded by years of complicated intimacy, the other barely
begun.
Here are all the things for which Sue Miller has always been beloved—the
complexity of experience precisely rendered, the richness of character and
emotion, the superb economy of style—fused with an utterly engrossing
story that has a great deal to say to women, and men, of all ages.
Lost in the Forest: A Novel (2005)
For nearly two decades, since the publication of her
iconic first novel, The Good Mother, Sue Miller has distinguished
herself as one of our most elegant and widely celebrated chroniclers of
family life, with a singular gift for laying bare the interior lives of
her characters. In each of her novels, Miller has written with exquisite
precision about the experience of grace in daily life–the sudden,
epiphanic recognition of the extraordinary amid the ordinary–as well as
the sharp and unexpected motions of the human heart away from it, toward
an unruly netherworld of upheaval and desire. But never before have
Miller’s powers been keener or more transfixing than they are in Lost
in the Forest, a novel set in the vineyards of Northern California
that tells the story of a young girl who, in the wake of a tragic
accident, seeks solace in a damaging love affair with a much older man.
Eva, a divorced and happily remarried mother of three, runs a small
bookstore in a town north of San Francisco. When her second husband, John,
is killed in a car accident, her family’s fragile peace is once again
overtaken by loss. Emily, the eldest, must grapple with newfound
independence and responsibility. Theo, the youngest, can only begin to
fathom his father’s death. But for Daisy, the middle child, John’s absence
opens up a world of bewilderment, exposing her at the onset of adolescence
to the chaos and instability that hover just beyond the safety of parental
love. In her sorrow, Daisy embarks on a harrowing sexual odyssey, a
journey that will cast her even farther out onto the harsh promontory of
adulthood and lost hope.
With astonishing sensuality and immediacy, Lost in the Forest moves
through the most intimate realms of domestic life, from grief and sex to
adolescence and marriage. It is a stunning, kaleidoscopic evocation of a
family in crisis, written with delicacy and masterful care. For her
lifelong fans and those just discovering Sue Miller for the first time,
here is a rich and gorgeously layered tale of a family breaking apart and
coming back together again: Sue Miller at her inimitable best.
The World Below (2001)
Maine, 1919. Georgia Rice, who has cared for her
father and two siblings since her mother's death, is diagnosed, at
nineteen, with tuberculosis and sent away to a sanitarium. Freed from the
burdens of caretaking, she discovers a nearly lost world of youth and
possibility, and meets the doomed young man who will become her lover.
Vermont, the present. On the heels of a divorce, Catherine Hubbard,
Georgia's granddaughter, takes up residence in Georgia's old house.
Sorting through her own affairs, Cath stumbles upon the true story of
Georgia's life and marriage, and of the misunderstanding upon which she
built a lasting love.
With the tales of these two women--one a country doctor's wife with a
haunting past, the other a twice-divorced San Francisco schoolteacher
casting about at midlife for answers to her future--Miller offers us a
novel of astonishing richness and emotional depth. Linked by bitter
disappointments, compromise, and powerful grace, the lives of Georgia and
Cath begin to seem remarkably similar, despite their distinctly different
times: two young girls, generations apart, motherless at nearly the same
age, thrust into early adulthood, struggling with confusing bonds of
attachment and guilt; both of them in marriages that are not what they
seem, forced to make choices that call into question the very nature of
intimacy, faithfulness, betrayal, and love. Marvelously written, expertly
told, The World Below captures the shadowy half-truths of the
visible world, and the beauty and sorrow submerged beneath the surfaces of
our lives--the lost world of the past, our lost hopes for the future. A
tour de force from one of our most beloved storytellers.
While I Was Gone (1999) -- 2000
Oprah Book Club Selection
Jo Becker has every reason to be content. She has
three dynamic daughters, a loving marriage, and a rewarding career. But
she feels a sense of unease. Then an old housemate reappears, sending Jo
back to a distant past when she lived in a communal house in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. Drawn deeper into her memories of that fateful summer in
1968, Jo begins to obsess about the person she once was. As she is pulled
farther from her present life, her husband, and her world, Jo struggles
against becoming enveloped by her past and its dark secret.
The Distinguished Guest (1995)
Lily Maynard is proud, chilly, difficult, and has
become a famous writer at age seventy-two. Now, stricken with Parkinson's
disease and staying with her architect son Alan, Lily must cope with her
fading powers as well as with disturbing memories of the events that
estranged her from her children and ended her marriage. For Alan, her
visit raises old questions about his relationship with her, about the
choices he has made in his own life, and about the nature of love,
disappointment, and grief. Profound and moving, The Distinguished Guest
reveals a family trying to understand the meaning of its life together,
while confronting inevitable loss and the vision of an immeasurably
altered future.
For Love (1993)
Lottie Gardner, her brother, Cameron, and their
childhood friend Elizabeth have all come together in their hometown of
Cambridge, Massachusetts, after years of separation. Lottie is barraged
with memories of the past as she packs up her mother's house and witnesses
the rekindling of an old romance between Cameron and Elizabeth. When a
senseless tragedy intrudes upon them, Lottie is forced to examine the
consequences of what she has done for love.
Family Pictures (1990)
The whole world could not have broken the spirit and
strength of the Eberhardt family of 1948. Lainey is a wonderful if
slightly eccentric mother. David is a good father, sometimes sarcastic,
always cool-tempered. Two wonderful children round out the perfect
picture. Then the next child arrives -- and life is never the same again.
Over the next forty years, the Eberhardt family struggles to survive a
flood tide of upheaval and heartbreak, love and betrayal, passion and
pain...hoping they can someday heal their hearts.
Inventing the Abbotts and Other Stories (1987)
Like Sue Miller's bestselling novels, this
collection of short stories explores the treacherously shifting ground of
erotic and family relationships with deftness and depth. The title story
is about a young man who takes up successively with three daughters of the
most fashionable family in town. In other stories, whose characters range
from a young girl in the first blush of sexual curiosity to a stricken
dowager whose seizures release a brutal and sometimes obscene candor, Sue
Miller presents a compelling gallery of contemporary men and women with
hungry hearts and dismayed consciences.
Movie (1997), Pat
O'Connor, director with Joaquin Phoenix and Liv Tyler
DVD
VHS
The Good Mother: A Novel (1986)
Recently divorced, Anna Dunlap has two passionate
attachments: her daughter, four-year-old Molly, and her lover, Leo, the
man who makes her feel beautiful -- and sexual -- for the first time.
Swept away by happiness and passion, Anna feels she has everything she's
ever wanted.
Then come the shocking charges that would threaten her new love, her new
"family" ... that force her to prove she is a good mother.
Movie (1988), Leonard Nimoy,
director with Diane Keaton and Liam Neeson
DVD
VHS
Death by Pad Thai: And Other Unforgettable Meals
(2006) by Douglas Bauer
Food isn’t just a gustatory pleasure; it is the
stuff of life. At its best and most memorable, a meal becomes a story—and
a story becomes a feast. In this collection of essays by some of the
country’s finest writers, food is the central player in memories both
exquisite and excruciating. Steve Almond recounts the gleeful daylong
preparation of a transcendent lobster pad thai dish. Sue Miller reveals that after a lifetime
of practical cooking, she is finally fed by a man who presents food as an
offering, made just for her. Aimee Bender ponders her lifelong envy of
what everyone else is having for lunch. Richard Russo relates the
celebratory day he and his wife spent eating their way through haute
Manhattan—and departing utterly famished.
Expertly compiled and edited by Douglas Bauer—including pieces by Amy
Bloom, Peter Mayle, Jane and Michael Stern, Ann Packer, and Andre Dubus
III—this unforgettable collection presents food as education, test,
reward, bait, magnet, and, most of all, gift. Gathered here are meals that
sate our most complex palate, the appreciation of life.
The Best American Short Stories 2002
(2002), Katrina Kenison and Sue Miller, eds.
The volume includes stories by Edwidge Danticat,
Jill McCorkle, E. L. Doctorow, Arthur
Miller, and Akhil Sharma, among others.
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