Synopses & Reviews
"We drove across America to talk with girls girls from a variety of landscapes and communities and backgrounds....We traveled through the rolling golden hills of the Palouse of eastern Washington, along the shaded banks of the San Antonio River, onto the trading floor of a brokerage firm in the dizzying heights of a Dallas skyscraper. We spoke with a girl who competes in the dying sport of sidesaddle riding; a Hmong girl who became an American citizen. We talked with a blues-rock musician, ballerinas, surfers, an ice skater, a girl who makes and plays with dolls....In this book, we wanted to look at ordinary girls and record both visually and verbally the extraordinary things that girls do and the drives and desires that lead them to do those things."
So begins
Girls, a radiant collection of original photographs and life stories by Jenny, Laura, and Martha McPhee, sisters who know a great deal about being girls (they were raised in the sixties and seventies, at the height of the women's movement) and about being around other girls (there were five sisters in the family, not to mention a mom, a stepmom, and four stepsisters), and who are now raising girls of their own. But what is it like to be a girl in America today? What constitutes a normal girl's experiences? How do girls talk about themselves and define themselves? How do they set themselves apart, and how do they fit in? These are the questions the McPhees asked on their cross-country odyssey, which spanned more than two years.
Girls is the illuminating, thought-provoking, and ultimately triumphant look at the answers they found.
Girls will introduce you to a rich and diverse population extraordinary girls pursuing their passions and "normal" girls discovering creative ways to define themselves. We meet young poets, novelists, musicians, unicyclists, football players, philanthropists, activists, chess players. Beautifully written by novelists Jenny and Martha McPhee and illustrated with the striking black-and-white images of award-winning photographer Laura McPhee, Girls reveals the astonishing scope of girls' lives today, and indicates the spirit, energy, and determination with which the women of tomorrow will fashion the future.
Review
"The sisters bring us a feminist perspective on selected girls, letting them speak for themselves as they imagine what they are and what they can be." Library Journal
Review
"The McPhees have criss-crossed this nation, and with wit, insight and an eye for the telling detail, created a narrative that inspires new hopes about what America's girls are capable of....A joyful adventure." Naomi Wolf
Review
"[I]n an age when it seems like you're nobody if you arne't on MTV, it's nice to be reminded that just doing your thing, no matter what it is, will make you a star." Bust Magazine
Review
"Girls reveals the astonishing scope of girls' lives today, and indicates the spirit, energy and determination with which the women of tomorrow will fashion the future." Salon.com
Synopsis
How do American girls see themselves and their lives today? What are their dreams? Jenny, Laura, and Martha McPhee take readers into the world of girls today, in this beautiful book of original photographs and life stories culled from the sisters' interviews with girls across America.
About the Author
Jenny McPhee is a writer and translator from the Italian. She has just completed her first novel,
The Center of Things.
Laura McPhee's most recent publication (in collaboration with Virginia Beahan) is No Ordinary Land. She is a professor of photography at the Massachusetts College of Art and has been the recipient of a number of grants, including a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship. Her photographs have been collected by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the J. Paul Getty Museum, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, among others.
Martha McPhee is the author of the novel Bright Angel Time and a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts grant for her novel in progress.