11.4.04 Matrimony & How Sassy Changed My Life

Matrimony Long in scope, ambitious with its characters, and grounded with realism and wry humor, MATRIMONY introduces us to Julian Wainwright and Mia Mendelsohn. Here are two intensely likeable yet wonderfully flawed characters, who meet their freshman year at Graymont College, a liberal arts school in western Massachusetts. Julian, an aspiring writer, has arrived at college from New York to study with his literary hero. Mia has come from Montreal searching for something new and unknown. When they meet, folding laundry, they fall deeply and happily into first love.

But real life soon intrudes, and a family crisis arises at the end of their senior year that will cement their relationship more seriously and quickly than they could have imagined. Together they make their way through the next fifteen years — through career changes, family conflicts and losses, betrayals and successes. From the university towns of Ann Arbor, Berkeley, and Iowa City, to the brownstones of Greenwich Village, the novel moves back and forth between Julian and Mia’s perspectives as Henkin explores the choices and sacrifices we make at different stages in our lives, our changes in ambition and desire, and how we come to lead the lives we live.

WR This Weekend: Joshua Henkin Starting at the height of the Reagan era and ending in thenew millennium, Matrimony is about love and friendship, about money and ambition, desire and tensions of faith. It asks what happens to a marriage when it is confronted by betrayal and the specter of mortality. What happens when people marry younger than they’d expected? Can love endure the passing of time?

The author will be joining the show at 6:00pm. Want to score a free copy of Matrimony? Leave a comment for the author here, and if we use it on the air, you’ll win a free book!

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How Sassy Changed My Life The inside story of Sassy is bittersweet—a teen magazine with an enormous, almost cult-like following, it enjoyed a brief but brilliant run from 1988 to 1994. For a generation of teenage girls, Sassy was nothing short of revolutionary, the signifier of all that was hip and cool . . . a phenomenon that brought the idea of girl power and girl culture into the mainstream.

Sassy had a knack for discovering the hippest new celebrities and musicians; it was the first commercial magazine to showcase riot grrrl, was chosen by Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love for their first cover photo as a couple, and also launched the careers of Chloe Sevigny and Spike Jonze. More than that, Sassy embraced social activism—it made feminism cool and it was never afraid to tackle taboo issues like teen sex and suicide. Today, Sassy nostalgia is very much alive. With the mainstream media even more juggernaut-ish than it was in the early ‘90s, Sassy devotees have landed in the blog world, where legions of fans keep Sassy alive by sharing their first-person chronicles of their love of Sassy, pop culture, activism, and stories about their lives.

WR 11.4.07 How Sassy Changed My Life About the Authors: Kara Jesella and Marisa Meltzer are New York–based writers. They have written and edited for publications such as The New York Times, Teen Vogue, Elle Girl, Bitch, Jane, Spin, Entertainment Weekly, Nylon, Nerve, and Elle.

Essential Links!
www.howsassychangedmylife.com
www.myspace.com/sassybook
Buy the Book

The authors will be joining the show at 6:25pm. Want to score a free copy of How Sassy Changed My Life? Leave a comment for the authors here, and if we use it on the air, you’ll win a free book!

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2 Responses to “11.4.04 Matrimony & How Sassy Changed My Life

  1. Bethany, on October 29th, 2007 at 9:42 am , said:

    SASSY was the first magazine I ever had a subscription too… or the only one I actually wanted to subscribe too. Hell, I even saved up allowance to be able to get it ($5 a week is pretty meager isn’t it?). Not only did it bring in the hip and cool to my house (which was pretty much over-run with Nancy Drew books and a whole lot of nerdy things)–it brought in the adult self I wanted–and hoped–to be.

    That being said, what was the most influential edition of SASSY to hit the stands? Any one article that really hit a chord with all the female youth? Maybe an article that got the most fan mail response?

    Aww… this brings back the adolescent memories! And did SASSY ever bring me to where I am today. I LIVED by those book reviews. ;-)

  2. Felicia C. Sullivan » Blog Archive » WR This Weekend: How Sassy Changed My Life & Matrimony!, on November 1st, 2007 at 5:33 am , said:

    […] will be joining the show at 6:25pm. Want to score a free copy of How Sassy Changed My Life? Click here to learn more Tag Me:These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web […]

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