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Alva Myrdal: A Daughter's Memoir (Radcliffe Biography Series)

AUTHOR: Sissela Bok
ISBN: 0201608154

SHORT DESCRIPTION: Author Sissela Bok relates the extraordinary story of the romance between her parents--diplomat and stateswoman Alva Myrdal and world famous economist Gunnar Myrdal--which began as a summer idyll and led to their receiving Nobel prizes, each in a...

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         Editorial Review

Alva Myrdal: A Daughter's Memoir (Radcliffe Biography Series)
- Book Review,
by Sissela Bok

From Publishers Weekly
Bok's candid and engaging biography tells how her mother, a Swedish diplomat and Nobel Peace Prize winner, challenged notions about the role of women in society and became known as the "conscience of the disarmament movement." Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Bok, a philosophy teacher at Brandeis University, discusses her mother's life and accomplishments in this new addition to the "Radcliffe Biography" series. She chronicles Alva's Swedish childhood, her elopement with an economics student, Gunnar Myrdal, who later won the Nobel Prize in economics, her career in the Swedish goverment and the United Nations, and her involvement in the international disarmament movement that won her the 1982 Nobel Peace Prize. The best part is Bok's highly personal and insightful commentary on her mother's life and life choices, which were unusual and even scandalous at the time but seem commonplace to us now. She also includes many excerpts from letters and other family papers, providing a fascinating look into an unusual and special family. Recommended for general and women's studies collections.- Gwen Gregory, U.S. Courts Lib., PhoenixCopyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews
Internationally acclaimed for her contribution to world peace, Alva Myrdal's personal life (1902-1986) was a series of battles--against her rural Swedish parents, her husband, her children, her reputation, and in her personal quest to find out ``How do I become myself?'' Such ironies abound in this tactful and poignant memoir by her daughter (Philosophy/Brandeis; A Strategy for Peace, 1989, etc.). ``Serving'' her demanding, egocentric, and volatile husband, Gunnar (her ``consort battleship,'' as she called him), who won the Nobel prize in Economics, Alva often left their three children for long periods of time with various surrogates, damaging them but mostly damaging her relationship with them. Still, she longed for the children she could not care for, designed a family home that isolated the parents, taught educational theory she did not follow. Her children--disheveled, neglected, drifting--parented themselves. Jan, the son, a talented writer, ultimately rejected his parents, publishing a scathing attack on his mother just as she was to receive the Nobel Peace Prize in 1982. Of the daughters, Kaj chose to live with a teacher on a farm, and Sissela, while her mother was in America lecturing on the status of women, was so insecure that she said she had to be seen by someone to know she was alive. And Alva's celebrated marriage itself declined into a quarrelsome intellectual companionship. Rational, unsentimental, the parents kept account books of all the money they ever spent on their children, sums they decided justified disinheriting them in favor of a ``universal heir,'' the abstract causes they had dedicated their lives to, a legacy that left the children begging from strangers for family mementos. Gunnar claimed that their social science was ``concerned with explaining why all these potentially and intentionally good people so often make life a hell for themselves and each other when they live together.'' This probing and forgiving book carries on the explanation, exploring those ironic connections and disconnections between the public and private lives that Alva, in searching for herself, could not see. -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


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         Book Review

Alva Myrdal: A Daughter's Memoir (Radcliffe Biography Series)
- Book Reviews,
by Sissela Bok

Alva Myrdal: A Daughter's Memoir

ANNOTATION

Author Sissela Bok relates the extraordinary story of the romance between her parents--diplomat and stateswoman Alva Myrdal and world famous economist Gunnar Myrdal--which began as a summer idyll and led to their receiving Nobel prizes, each in a separate field. "Profoundly inspiring."--Betty Friedan.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Bok ( Secrets ) here offers a loving and candid memoir of her mother, the Swedish diplomat and Nobel Peace Prize winner whose dedication to nuclear disarmament led one of her colleagues at the U.N. to describe her as ``the conscience of the disarmament movement.'' Born and raised in rural Sweden, Myrdal (1902-1986) struggled for the right to further her education beyond grade school. After she graduated from Stockholm University she went on, in her writing, teaching and work for the Swedish government and the U.N., to challenge prevailing notions about raising and educating children, the role of women in society, and the responsibility of developed countries in extending prosperity and democracy to the Third World. She frequently collaborated with her husband, economist Gunnar Myrdal; their book Crisis in the Population Question helped kindle the debate that led to the formation of the Swedish welfare state. Bok reveals that while her parents' marriage appeared a perfect partnership, her mother made many compromises--later regretted--for the sake of her husband's career. This is an inspiring and engaging account of one of the most remarkable women of the 20th century. (June)

Library Journal

Bok, a philosophy teacher at Brandeis University, discusses her mother's life and accomplishments in this new addition to the ``Radcliffe Biography'' series. She chronicles Alva's Swedish childhood, her elopement with an economics student, Gunnar Myrdal, who later won the Nobel Prize in economics, her career in the Swedish goverment and the United Nations, and her involvement in the international disarmament movement that won her the 1982 Nobel Peace Prize. The best part is Bok's highly personal and insightful commentary on her mother's life and life choices, which were unusual and even scandalous at the time but seem commonplace to us now. She also includes many excerpts from letters and other family papers, providing a fascinating look into an unusual and special family. Recommended for general and women's studies collections.-- Gwen Gregory, U.S. Courts Lib., Phoenix


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