[Betty MacDonald Memoirs 04] • Onions in the Stew

[Betty MacDonald Memoirs 04] • Onions in the Stew
Authors
MacDonald, Betty
Publisher
Harper Perennial
Tags
humour , biography
Date
1955-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
Size
0.49 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 28 times

You know how sometimes friendship blossoms in the first few moments of meeting? "Something clicked," we say. Well, that's what discovering Betty MacDonald was like for me: I happened to read a couple of pages of one of her books and — *click* — knew right away that here was a vivacious writer whose friendly, funny, and fiery company I was really going to enjoy. Although MacDonald's first and most popular book, *The Egg and I,* has remained in print since its original publication, her three other volumes have been unavailable for decades. *The Plague and I* recounts MacDonald's experiences in a Seattle sanitarium, where the author spent almost a year (1938-39) battling tuberculosis. The White Plague was no laughing matter, but MacDonald nonetheless makes a sprightly tale of her brush with something deadly. *Anybody Can Do Anything* is a high-spirited, hilarious celebration of how "the warmth and loyalty and laughter of a big family" brightened their weathering of The Great Depression. In *Onions in the Stew,* MacDonald is in unbuttonedly frolicsome form as she describes how, with husband and daughters, she set to work making a life on a rough-and-tumble island in Puget Sound, a ferry-ride from Seattle.