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Home Free: The Myth of the Empty Nest

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Home Free: The Myth of the Empty Nest

by Marni Jackson

Thomas Allen Publishers | August 28, 2010 | Trade Paperback

From the author of the best-selling The Mother Zone, comes a comic narrative about an over-anxious mother and her twenty-something over-adventurous son.

Home Free is about the last secret lap of parenting: getting through your kids'' twenties and learning how to let them go at the same time. The twentysomethings who invented the generation gap in the nineteen sixties have grown up to become hyperinvolved parents who can''t stop worrying about  their adult kids.

Many of the kids are still living in the basement, bussing tables instead of going to business school, and depending on their parents for emotional support. Just when they thought family life was on the wane, parents are back on deck with their children; at the same time many are often coping with

their own frail or dying parents.

Is this the new, improved face of family, where kids still depend on their parents for stability, friendship and guidance in an increasingly unforgiving world? Or has this era of over-invested parents, living vicariously through the achievements of their children, bred dependency in the new generation?


Home Free
is an intimate, candid, reflective and comic memoir that focuses on this new and undefined stage of family life: the challenges of helping our kids navigate their twenties-while learning how to let go of them at the same time.

 

 

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    I don't have kids, so I was not sure I was the target audience for this book. But I have always loved Marni Jackson's writing. So I picked this book up and couldn't stop reading. It's ostensibly about Boomer parents and their 20-something kids but it is so much more. With wit and insight and the most delicious writing, Jackson allows readers into her life as a mother and a daughter. She takes her readers on an unsentimental, blisteringly honest journey through two generations of parenting. It might like familiar territory but with Jackson as our guide, the reader is in for a rich experience that doesn't end when you reach the last page. This is the kind of book
    you want to start again as so soon as you have finished it.

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From the Publisher

From the author of the best-selling The Mother Zone, comes a comic narrative about an over-anxious mother and her twenty-something over-adventurous son.

Home Free is about the last secret lap of parenting: getting through your kids'' twenties and learning how to let them go at the same time. The twentysomethings who invented the generation gap in the nineteen sixties have grown up to become hyperinvolved parents who can''t stop worrying about  their adult kids.

Many of the kids are still living in the basement, bussing tables instead of going to business school, and depending on their parents for emotional support. Just when they thought family life was on the wane, parents are back on deck with their children; at the same time many are often coping with

their own frail or dying parents.

Is this the new, improved face of family, where kids still depend on their parents for stability, friendship and guidance in an increasingly unforgiving world? Or has this era of over-invested parents, living vicariously through the achievements of their children, bred dependency in the new generation?


Home Free
is an intimate, candid, reflective and comic memoir that focuses on this new and undefined stage of family life: the challenges of helping our kids navigate their twenties-while learning how to let go of them at the same time.

 

 

About the Author

Marni Jackson is a journalist, broadcaster and author. Formerly the Rogers Chair for Creative Writing at Banff and senior editor at The Walrus. Jackson has a wide range of experience

in the Canadian media. She is the author of the bestselling The Mother Zone: Love, Sex and laundry in the Modern Family, as well as Pain: The Fifth Vital Sign. She lives in Toronto.

Trade Paperback

288 Pages, 6 x 9 x 0.5 in

August 28, 2010

Thomas Allen Publishers

English


0887626165
9780887626166

From the Critics

"...lively and thoughful..."

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