Synopses & Reviews
Alice Mattison's last novel,
New York Times Notable Book The Book Borrower, was called "extraordinary" (
Washington Post Book World) and "ambitious and original" (
Wall Street Journal), and was lauded for capturing in "deceptively quiet prose ... the fraught, complex relations of men and women" (
New York Times Book Review). Now Mattison revisits Daisy Andalusia, a character from her critically acclaimed collection of stories,
Men Giving Money, Women Yelling, in a simmering, intelligent novel of love, marriage, and friendship set in a New England city that's sometimes charming, sometimes dangerous.
Following an early first marriage, Daisy Andalusia remained single and enjoyed the company of men on her own terms, making the most of her independent life -- especially her sexual freedom. But now, in her fifties, she is no longer unattached; after a long on-again off-again love affair, she has married inner-city landlord Pekko Roberts. A resident of New Haven, Connecticut, Daisy earns her living organizing clutter, a calling that affords her an intimate peek at the disorder of the lives of others. Her business soon leads her to a Yale project studying small cities, where she partners with the ebullient director, Gordon Skeetling.
Over her husband's fierce objections -- and working with Gordon, with whom life becomes ever more complicated -- Daisy organizes a conference about murder in small cities, including New Haven. And for a community theater group seeking a subject for a play, Daisy appropriates a tabloid headline that Gordon has kept for years among the dusty piles in his office: two-headed woman weds two men: doc says she's twins. These words will take on increasing significance over eight transformative months, March through October, 2001, as Daisy questions whether she can truly be a part of anything -- a two-headed woman, a friendship, a marriage -- while discovering more about herself than she wants to know.
Profoundly moving and psychologically penetrating, The Wedding of the Two-Headed Woman is the intimate, endearing, and finally triumphant story of how Daisy at last learns to live the life she has so lovingly crafted for herself.
Review
“Mattisons writing gives the humdrum an edge we didnt know it possessed.” Los Angeles Times Book Review
Synopsis
From critically acclaimed author Alice Mattison comes a lyrical and moving meditation on love, marriage, and identity.
About the Author
Alice Mattison grew up in Brooklyn, studied at Queens College and Harvard, and teaches fiction in the Bennington Writers Seminars. She is the author of three previous novels, three collections of short stories, and a volume of poetry. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker, Glimmer Train, Ploughshares, Agni, New York Stories, The Threepenny Review, and The Pushcart Prize. Her short story "In Case We're Separated" was in The Best American Short Stories 2002. She lives in New Haven, Connecticut.